| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Buffer overflow in the converter for Microsoft WordPerfect 5.x on Office 2000, Office XP, Office 2003, and Works Suites 2001 through 2004 allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code via a malicious document or website. |
| Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 2000 hosts allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service (unavailable connections) by sending multiple SMB SMBnegprots requests but not reading the response that is sent back. |
| Windows NT Autorun executes the autorun.inf file on non-removable media, which allows local attackers to specify an alternate program to execute when other users access a drive. |
| A Windows NT administrator account has the default name of Administrator. |
| A Windows NT account policy has inappropriate, security-critical settings for lockout, e.g. lockout duration, lockout after bad logon attempts, etc. |
| The ExAir sample site in IIS 4 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (CPU consumption) via a direct request to the (1) advsearch.asp, (2) query.asp, or (3) search.asp scripts. |
| In IIS, an attacker could determine a real path using a request for a non-existent URL that would be interpreted by Perl (perl.exe). |
| Internet Explorer 5.0 allows window spoofing, allowing a remote attacker to spoof a legitimate web site and capture information from the client. |
| NETBIOS share information may be published through SNMP registry keys in NT. |
| A Windows NT domain user or administrator account has a guessable password. |
| A Windows NT domain user or administrator account has a default, null, blank, or missing password. |
| Internet Explorer 5.01 through 6 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (application crash) via Javascript in a web page that calls location.replace on itself, causing a loop. |
| A Windows NT user has inappropriate rights or privileges, e.g. Act as System, Add Workstation, Backup, Change System Time, Create Pagefile, Create Permanent Object, Create Token Name, Debug, Generate Security Audit, Increase Priority, Increase Quota, Load Driver, Lock Memory, Profile Single Process, Remote Shutdown, Replace Process Token, Restore, System Environment, Take Ownership, or Unsolicited Input. |
| A configuration in a web browser such as Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator allows execution of active content such as ActiveX, Java, Javascript, etc. |
| The Windows NT guest account is enabled. |
| Windows NT automatically logs in an administrator upon rebooting. |
| Microsoft Windows XP allows local users to bypass a locked screen and run certain programs that are associated with Hot Keys. |
| A Windows NT system's file audit policy does not log an event success or failure for non-critical files or directories. |
| The HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT key in a Windows NT system has inappropriate, system-critical permissions. |
| Microsoft Outlook 8.5 and earlier, and Outlook Express 5 and earlier, with the "Automatically put people I reply to in my address book" option enabled, do not notify the user when the "Reply-To" address is different than the "From" address, which could allow an untrusted remote attacker to spoof legitimate addresses and intercept email from the client that is intended for another user. |