A vulnerability in the web management interface of Cisco Small Business 220 Series Smart Switches could allow an unauthenticated, remote malicious user to upload arbitrary files. The vulnerability is due to incomplete authorization checks in the web management interface. An attacker could exploit this vulnerability by sending a malicious request to certain parts of the web management interface. Depending on the configuration of the affected switch, the malicious request must be sent via HTTP or HTTPS. A successful exploit could allow the malicious user to modify the configuration of an affected device or to inject a reverse shell. This vulnerability affects Cisco Small Business 220 Series Smart Switches running firmware versions before 1.1.4.4 with the web management interface enabled. The web management interface is enabled via both HTTP and HTTPS by default.
Vulnerable Product | Search on Vulmon | Subscribe to Product |
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cisco sf-220-24_firmware |
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cisco sf220-24p_firmware |
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cisco sf220-48_firmware |
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cisco sf220-48p_firmware |
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cisco sg220-26_firmware |
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cisco sg220-26p_firmware |
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cisco sg220-28_firmware |
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cisco sg220-28mp_firmware |
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cisco sg220-50_firmware |
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cisco sg220-50p_firmware |
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cisco sg220-52_firmware |
Plus UCS and other gear need updates Breaker, breaker. Apple's iOS 12.4 update breaks jailbreak break, un-breaks the break. 10-4
Cisco has emitted a fresh round of software updates to address security holes in its network switches and controllers. Switchzilla's latest patch bundle includes six alerts for what it rates as critical issues, including flaws in its Small Business 220 Series switches and UCS Director software. Combined with Cisco's fixes for 'high' and 'moderate' issues, the networking giant posted a total of 33 security alerts on Wednesday. For the Small Business 220 Switches, a pair of patches address CVE-201...