A flaw was found in Red Hat Openshift AI Service. A low-privileged attacker with access to an authenticated account, for example as a data scientist using a standard Jupyter notebook, can escalate their privileges to a full cluster administrator. This allows for the complete compromise of the clusters confidentiality, integrity, and availability. The attacker can steal sensitive data, disrupt all services, and take control of the underlying infrastructure, leading to a total breach of the platform and all applications hosted on it.
A product incorrectly assigns a privilege to a particular actor, creating an unintended sphere of control for that actor.
Name | Vendor | Start Version | End Version |
---|---|---|---|
Red Hat OpenShift AI 2.16 | RedHat | rhoai/odh-rhel8-operator:sha256:cebc8815e03b772343b15d0a7dce8fad6fcc71dd437d871db5a3691472350803 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift AI 2.19 | RedHat | rhoai/odh-rhel8-operator:sha256:43a8904396e55074ffb1afcfcd8fe6db0edcbc918a8ff8301b6b0920aea7eabf | * |
Red Hat OpenShift AI 2.21 | RedHat | rhoai/odh-rhel9-operator:sha256:66e2c3916ae1cdb08edab90f0868965b26991ce43fb120db7f2d05311d90c9c8 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift AI 2.22 | RedHat | rhoai/odh-rhel9-operator:sha256:57b12c6c6ed0a9f6af1388df3b8f60bbd82d3e4add1928b9578fa91ff24f570c | * |