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CVE-2023-50358

Published: 13/02/2024 Updated: 15/02/2024

Vulnerability Summary

An OS command injection vulnerability has been reported to affect several QNAP operating system versions. If exploited, the vulnerability could allow users to execute commands via a network. We have already fixed the vulnerability in the following versions: QTS 5.1.5.2645 build 20240116 and later QTS 4.5.4.2627 build 20231225 and later QTS 4.3.6.2665 build 20240131 and later QTS 4.3.4.2675 build 20240131 and later QTS 4.3.3.2644 build 20240131 and later QTS 4.2.6 build 20240131 and later QuTS hero h5.1.5.2647 build 20240118 and later QuTS hero h4.5.4.2626 build 20231225 and later QuTScloud c5.1.5.2651 and later

Vulnerability Trend

Vendor Advisories

Check Point Reference: CPAI-2023-1547 Date Published: 25 Feb 2024 Severity: High ...

Github Repositories

New exploit for admin access to QNAP OS (CVE-2023-50358)

CVE-2023-50358-POC New exploit for admin access to QNAP OS (CVE-2023-50358) USAGE Description The scrip

Recent Articles

QNAP vulnerability disclosure ends up an utter shambles
The Register

Topics Security Off-Prem On-Prem Software Offbeat Special Features Vendor Voice Vendor Voice Resources Two new flaws, one zero-day, countless different patches, but everything's fine!

Network-attached storage (NAS) specialist QNAP has disclosed and released fixes for two new vulnerabilities, one of them a zero-day discovered in early November. The Taiwanese company's coordinated disclosure of the issues with researchers at Unit 42 by Palo Alto Networks has, however, led to some confusion over the severity of the security problem. QNAP assigned CVE-2023-50358 a middling 5.8-out-of-10 severity score, the breakdown of which revealed it was classified as a high-complexity attack ...

Researchers call out QNAP for dragging its heels on patch development
The Register

Topics Security Off-Prem On-Prem Software Offbeat Special Features Vendor Voice Vendor Voice Resources WatchTowr publishes report claiming vendor failed to issue fixes after four months

Infosec boffins say they were forced to go public after QNAP failed to fix various vulnerabilities that were reported to it months ago. Researchers at watchTowr said on Friday that they drilled into QNAP's QTS, QuTSCLoud, and QTS hero operating systems and found 15 vulnerabilities, with only four of the holes receiving patches. Six of the remaining 11 bugs were accepted and validated by QNAP, and all have CVEs assigned to them, but despite most being reported in early January, and one as far bac...