Untrusted search path vulnerability in Mozilla Network Security Services (NSS), as used in Google Chrome before 17 on Windows and Mac OS X, might allow local users to gain privileges via a Trojan horse pkcs11.txt file in a top-level directory. NOTE: the vendor's response was "Strange behavior, but we're not treating this as a security bug."
References
Link | Resource |
---|---|
http://blog.acrossecurity.com/2011/10/google-chrome-pkcs11txt-file-planting.html | Exploit Third Party Advisory |
http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=97426 | Exploit Issue Tracking Patch Vendor Advisory |
http://securityreason.com/securityalert/8483 | Third Party Advisory |
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641052 | Issue Tracking Patch Third Party Advisory |
https://hermes.opensuse.org/messages/13154861 | Broken Link |
https://hermes.opensuse.org/messages/13155432 | Broken Link |
https://oval.cisecurity.org/repository/search/definition/oval%3Aorg.mitre.oval%3Adef%3A13414 | Third Party Advisory |
Configurations
Configuration 1 (hide)
AND |
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History
No history.
Information
Published : 2011-10-28 02:49
Updated : 2024-05-17 00:50
NVD link : CVE-2011-3640
Mitre link : CVE-2011-3640
CVE.ORG link : CVE-2011-3640
JSON object : View
Products Affected
microsoft
- windows
apple
- macos
- chrome
CWE
CWE-426
Untrusted Search Path