Improper validation of specified type of input for some Intel(R) PROSet/Wireless and Intel(R) Killer(TM) Wi-Fi software before version 22.240 may allow an unauthenticated user to potentially enable denial of service via adjacent access.
The product receives input that is expected to be of a certain type, but it does not validate or incorrectly validates that the input is actually of the expected type.
Name | Vendor | Start Version | End Version |
---|---|---|---|
Killer | Intel | * | 3.1423.712 (excluding) |
Proset/wireless | Intel | * | 22.240 (excluding) |
Linux-firmware | Ubuntu | bionic | * |
Linux-firmware | Ubuntu | focal | * |
Linux-firmware | Ubuntu | mantic | * |
Linux-firmware | Ubuntu | oracular | * |
Linux-firmware | Ubuntu | trusty | * |
Linux-firmware | Ubuntu | trusty/esm | * |
Linux-firmware | Ubuntu | xenial | * |
When input does not comply with the expected type, attackers could trigger unexpected errors, cause incorrect actions to take place, or exploit latent vulnerabilities that would not be possible if the input conformed with the expected type. This weakness can appear in type-unsafe programming languages, or in programming languages that support casting or conversion of an input to another type.