VID |
28938 |
Severity |
40 |
Port |
139,445 |
Protocol |
TCP |
Class |
SMB |
Detailed Description |
The version of Thunderbird installed on the remote Windows host is prior to 91.11. It is, therefore, affected by multiple vulnerabilities as referenced in the mfsa2022-26 advisory.
- A malicious website that could create a popup could have resized the popup to overlay the address bar with its own content, resulting in potential user confusion or spoofing attacks. This bug only affects Thunderbird for Linux. Other operating systems are unaffected. (CVE-2022-34479)
- Navigations between XML documents may have led to a use-after-free and potentially exploitable crash.(CVE-2022-34470)
- An iframe that was not permitted to run scripts could do so if the user clicked on a <code>javascript:</code> link. (CVE-2022-34468)
- An OpenPGP digital signature includes information about the date when the signature was created. When displaying an email that contains a digital signature, the email's date will be shown. If the dates were different, then Thunderbird didn't report the email as having an invalid signature. If an attacker performed a replay attack, in which an old email with old contents are resent at a later time, it could lead the victim to believe that the statements in the email are current. Fixed versions of Thunderbird will require that the signature's date roughly matches the displayed date of the email. (CVE-2022-2226)
- In the <code>nsTArrayImpl::ReplaceElementsAt()</code> function, an integer overflow could have occurred when the number of elements to replace was too large for the container. (CVE-2022-34481)
- An attacker could have injected CSS into stylesheets accessible via internal URIs, such as resource:, and in doing so bypass a page's Content Security Policy. (CVE-2022-31744)
- If there was a PAC URL set and the server that hosts the PAC was not reachable, OCSP requests would have been blocked, resulting in incorrect error pages being shown. (CVE-2022-34472)
- The <code>ms-msdt</code>, <code>search</code>, and <code>search-ms</code> protocols deliver content to Microsoft applications, bypassing the browser, when a user accepts a prompt. These applications have had known vulnerabilities, exploited in the wild (although we know of none exploited through Thunderbird), so in this release Thunderbird has blocked these protocols from prompting the user to open them. This bug only affects Thunderbird on Windows. Other operating systems are unaffected. (CVE-2022-34478)
- If an object prototype was corrupted by an attacker, they would have been able to set undesired attributes on a JavaScript object, leading to privileged code execution. (CVE-2022-2200)
- The Mozilla Fuzzing Team reported potential vulnerabilities present in Thunderbird 91.10. Some of these bugs showed evidence of memory corruption and we presume that with enough effort some of these could have been exploited to run arbitrary code. (CVE-2022-34484)
* References: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/security/advisories/mfsa2022-26/
* Platforms Affected: Mozilla Foundation, Thunderbird versions prior to 91.11 Any operating system Any version |
Recommendation |
Upgrade to the latest version of Thunderbird (91.11 or later), available from the Mozilla Web site at http://www.mozilla.com/thunderbird/ |
Related URL |
CVE-2022-31744,CVE-2022-34479,CVE-2022-34470,CVE-2022-34468,CVE-2022-34481,CVE-2022-34472,CVE-2022-34478,CVE-2022-2200,CVE-2022-34484 (CVE) |
Related URL |
(SecurityFocus) |
Related URL |
(ISS) |
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