CVE Vulnerabilities

CVE-2024-20694

Exposure of Resource to Wrong Sphere

Published: Jan 09, 2024 | Modified: Apr 11, 2024
CVSS 3.x
N/A
Source:
NVD
CVSS 2.x
RedHat/V2
RedHat/V3
Ubuntu

Windows CoreMessaging Information Disclosure Vulnerability

Weakness

The product exposes a resource to the wrong control sphere, providing unintended actors with inappropriate access to the resource.

Affected Software

Name Vendor Start Version End Version
Windows_10_1607 Microsoft * 10.0.14393.6614 (excluding)
Windows_10_1809 Microsoft * 10.0.17763.5329 (excluding)
Windows_10_21h2 Microsoft * 10.0.19044.3930 (excluding)
Windows_10_22h2 Microsoft * 10.0.19045.3930 (excluding)
Windows_11_21h2 Microsoft * 10.0.22000.2713 (excluding)
Windows_11_22h2 Microsoft * 10.0.22621.3007 (excluding)
Windows_11_23h2 Microsoft * 10.0.22631.3007 (excluding)
Windows_server_2016 Microsoft * 10.0.14393.6614 (excluding)
Windows_server_2019 Microsoft * 10.0.17763.5329 (excluding)
Windows_server_2022 Microsoft * 10.0.20348.2227 (excluding)
Windows_server_2022_23h2 Microsoft * 10.0.25398.643 (excluding)

Extended Description

Resources such as files and directories may be inadvertently exposed through mechanisms such as insecure permissions, or when a program accidentally operates on the wrong object. For example, a program may intend that private files can only be provided to a specific user. This effectively defines a control sphere that is intended to prevent attackers from accessing these private files. If the file permissions are insecure, then parties other than the user will be able to access those files. A separate control sphere might effectively require that the user can only access the private files, but not any other files on the system. If the program does not ensure that the user is only requesting private files, then the user might be able to access other files on the system. In either case, the end result is that a resource has been exposed to the wrong party.

References