| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| An authentication bypass vulnerability in NETGEAR Orbi devices allows
users connected to the local network to access the router web interface
as an admin. |
| An insufficient input validation vulnerability in NETGEAR Orbi routers
allows attackers connected to the router's LAN to execute OS command
injections. |
| An insufficient authentication vulnerability in NETGEAR WiFi range
extenders allows a network adjacent attacker with WiFi authentication or
a physical Ethernet port connection to bypass the authentication
process and access the admin panel. |
| An insufficient input validation vulnerability in the NETGEAR XR1000v2
allows attackers connected to the router's LAN to execute OS command
injections. |
| A path traversal vulnerability in NETGEAR WiFi range extenders allows
an attacker with LAN authentication to access the router's IP and
review the contents of the dynamically generated webproc file, which
records the username and password submitted to the router GUI. |
| An insufficient input validation vulnerability in NETGEAR Orbi devices'
DHCPv6 functionality allows network adjacent attackers authenticated
over WiFi or on LAN to execute OS command injections on the router.
DHCPv6 is not enabled by default. |
| Some end of service NETGEAR products provide "TelnetEnable" functionality, which allows a magic packet to activate telnet service on the box. |
| NetGear WG602 (aka WG602v1) Wireless Access Point firmware 1.04.0 and 1.5.67 has a hardcoded account of username "super" and password "5777364", which allows remote attackers to modify the configuration. |
| NETGEAR FM114P allows remote attackers to bypass access restrictions for web sites via a URL that uses the IP address instead of the hostname. |
| Netgear RP114 allows remote attackers to bypass the keyword based URL filtering by requesting a long URL, as demonstrated using a large number of %20 (hex-encoded space) sequences. |
| Netgear FVG318 running firmware 1.0.40 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (router reset) via TCP packets with bad checksums. |
| Web-Based Administration in Netgear FVS318 VPN Router allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (no new connections) via a large number of open HTTP connections. |
| Netgear RP114 Cable/DSL Web Safe Router Firmware 3.26, when configured to block traffic below port 1024, allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (hang) via a port scan of the WAN port. |
| Directory traversal vulnerability in the web configuration interface in Netgear FM114P 1.4 allows remote attackers to read arbitrary files, such as the netgear.cfg configuration file, via a hex-encoded (%2e%2e%2f) ../ (dot dot slash) in the port parameter. |
| Atmel Firmware 1.3 Wireless Access Point (WAP) allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via a SNMP request with (1) a community string other than "public" or (2) an unknown OID, which causes the WAP to deny subsequent SNMP requests. |
| SNMP service in Atmel 802.11b VNET-B Access Point 1.3 and earlier, as used in Netgear ME102 and Linksys WAP11, accepts arbitrary community strings with requested MIB modifications, which allows remote attackers to obtain sensitive information such as WEP keys, cause a denial of service, or gain access to the network. |
| NETGEAR DG834GT Wireless ADSL router running firmware 1.01.28 allows attackers to cause a denial of service (device hang) via a long string in the username field in the login window. |
| Netgear FM114P firmware 1.3 wireless firewall, when configured to backup configuration information, stores DDNS (DynDNS) user name and password, MAC address filtering table and possibly other information in cleartext, which could allow local users to obtain sensitive information. |
| Netgear 614 and 624 routers, possibly running VXWorks, allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service by sending a malformed DCC SEND string to an IRC channel, which causes an IRC connection reset, possibly related to the masquerading code for NAT environments, and as demonstrated via (1) a DCC SEND with a single long argument, or (2) a DCC SEND with IP, port, and filesize arguments with a 0 value. |
| The backup configuration option in NETGEAR WGT624 Wireless Firewall Router stores sensitive information in cleartext, which allows remote attackers to obtain passwords and gain privileges. |