| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| The affected products contain JSON Web Tokens (JWT) that do not expire, which could allow an attacker to gain access to the system. |
| A vulnerability has been identified in SIMATIC PCS neo V4.0 (All versions), SIMATIC PCS neo V4.1 (All versions < V4.1 Update 2), SIMATIC PCS neo V5.0 (All versions < V5.0 Update 1), SIMOCODE ES V19 (All versions < V19 Update 1), SIRIUS Safety ES V19 (TIA Portal) (All versions < V19 Update 1), SIRIUS Soft Starter ES V19 (TIA Portal) (All versions < V19 Update 1), TIA Administrator (All versions < V3.0.4). Affected products do not correctly invalidate user sessions upon user logout. This could allow a remote unauthenticated attacker, who has obtained the session token by other means, to re-use a legitimate user's session even after logout. |
| Web sessions in the web interface of Palo Alto Networks Prisma® Cloud Compute Edition do not expire when users are deleted, which makes Prisma Cloud Compute Edition susceptible to unauthorized access.
Compute in Prisma Cloud Enterprise Edition is not affected by this issue. |
| The notification emails sent by Soar Cloud HR Portal contain a link with a embedded session. The expiration of the session is not properly configured, remaining valid for more than 7 days and can be reused. |
| Missing session invalidation after user deletion. The following products are affected: Acronis Cyber Protect 16 (Windows) before build 39169. |
| IoT Haat Smart Plug IH-IN-16A-S IH-IN-16A-S v5.16.1 suffers from Insufficient Session Expiration. The lack of validation of the authentication token at the IoT Haat during the Access Point Pairing mode leads the attacker to replay the Wi-Fi packets and forcefully turn off the access point after the authentication token has expired. |
| Improper authentication in the API authentication middleware of HCL DevOps Loop allows authentication tokens to be accepted without proper validation of their expiration and cryptographic signature. As a result, an attacker could potentially use expired or tampered tokens to gain unauthorized access to sensitive resources and perform actions with elevated privileges. |
| Strapi uses JSON Web Tokens (JWT) for authentication. After logout or account deactivation, the JWT is not invalidated, which allows an attacker who has stolen or intercepted the token to freely reuse it until its expiration date (which is set to 30 days by default, but can be changed).
The existence of /admin/renew-token endpoint allows anyone to renew near-expiration tokens indefinitely, further increasing the impact of this attack.
This issue has been fixed in version 5.24.1. |
| @festify/secure-session creates a secure stateless cookie session for Fastify. At the end of the request handling, it will encrypt all data in the session with a secret key and attach the ciphertext as a cookie value with the defined cookie name. After that, the session on the server side is destroyed. When an encrypted cookie with matching session name is provided with subsequent requests, it will decrypt the ciphertext to get the data. The plugin then creates a new session with the data in the ciphertext. Thus theoretically the web instance is still accessing the data from a server-side session, but technically that session is generated solely from a user provided cookie (which is assumed to be non-craftable because it is encrypted with a secret key not known to the user). The issue exists in the session removal process. In the delete function of the code, when the session is deleted, it is marked for deletion. However, if an attacker could gain access to the cookie, they could keep using it forever. Version 7.3.0 contains a patch for the issue. As a workaround, one may include a "last update" field in the session, and treat "old sessions" as expired. |
| A flaw was found in Keycloak. Keycloak does not immediately enforce the disabling of the "Remember Me" realm setting on existing user sessions. Sessions created while "Remember Me" was active retain their extended session lifetime until they expire, overriding the administrator's recent security configuration change. This is a logic flaw in session management increases the potential window for successful session hijacking or unauthorized long-term access persistence. The flaw lies in the session expiration logic relying on the session-local "remember-me" flag without validating the current realm-level configuration. |
| In the Bentley ALIM Web application, certain configuration settings can cause exposure of a user's ALIM session token when the user attempts to download files. This is fixed in Assetwise ALIM Web 23.00.04.04 and Assetwise Information Integrity Server 23.00.02.03. |
| OpenObserve is a cloud-native observability platform. Prior to version 0.16.0, organization invitation tokens do not expire once issued, remain valid even after the invited user is removed from the organization, and allow multiple invitations to the same email with different roles where all issued links remain valid simultaneously. This results in broken access control where a removed or demoted user can regain access or escalate privileges. This issue has been patched in version 0.16.0. |
| Incorrect cookie session handling in WombatDialer before 25.02 results in the full session identity being written to system logs and could be used by a malicious attacker to impersonate an existing user session. |
| `@digitalbazaar/zcap` provides JavaScript reference implementation for Authorization Capabilities. Prior to version 9.0.1, when invoking a capability with a chain depth of 2, i.e., it is delegated directly from the root capability, the `expires` property is not properly checked against the current date or other `date` param. This can allow invocations outside of the original intended time period. A zcap still cannot be invoked without being able to use the associated private key material. `@digitalbazaar/zcap` v9.0.1 fixes expiration checking. As a workaround, one may revoke a zcap at any time. |
| Insufficient Session Expiration vulnerability in ash-project ash_authentication_phoenix allows Session Hijacking. This vulnerability is associated with program files lib/ash_authentication_phoenix/controller.ex.
This issue affects ash_authentication_phoenix until 2.10.0. |
| The
equipment grants a JWT token for each connection in the timeline, but during an
active valid session, a hijacking of the token can be done. This will allow an
attacker with the token modify parameters of security, access or even steal the
session without
the legitimate and active session detecting it. The web server allows the
attacker to reuse an old session JWT token while the legitimate session is
active. |
| Payload uses JSON Web Tokens (JWT) for authentication. After log out JWT is not invalidated, which allows an attacker who has stolen or intercepted token to freely reuse it until expiration date (which is by default set to 2 hours, but can be changed).
This issue has been fixed in version 3.44.0 of Payload. |
| wire-webapp is the web application for the open-source messaging service Wire. A change caused a regression resulting in sessions not being properly invalidated. A user that logged out of the Wire webapp, could have been automatically logged in again after re-opening the application. This does not happen when the user is logged in as a temporary user by selecting "This is a public computer" during login or the user selects "Delete all your personal information and conversations on this device" upon logout. The underlying issue has been fixed with wire-webapp version 2025-05-20-production.0. As a workaround, this behavior can be prevented by either deleting all information upon logout as well as logging in as a temporary client. |
| cskefu v7 suffers from Insufficient Session Expiration, which allows attackers to exploit the old session for malicious activity. |
| ALBEDO Telecom Net.Time - PTP/NTP clock (Serial No. NBC0081P) software release 1.4.4 is vulnerable to an insufficient session expiration vulnerability, which
could permit an attacker to transmit passwords over unencrypted
connections, resulting in the product becoming vulnerable to
interception. |