7 matches found
Astra Linux – Vulnerability in Firefox
An attacker who could have convinced a user to drag and drop an image into a file system could have manipulated the resulting filename to include an executable extension. By doing so, the attacker could potentially trick the user into executing malicious code. Although very similar, this is a...
Astra Linux – Vulnerability in Firefox and Thunderbird
If a user were convinced to drag and drop an image onto their desktop or another folder, the resulting object could be transformed into an executable script that would execute arbitrary code upon the user clicking on it. This vulnerability affects Firefox 97, Thunderbird 91.6, and Firefox ESR 91....
CVE-2022-34482
An attacker who could have convinced a user to drag and drop an image to a filesystem could have manipulated the resulting filename to contain an executable extension, and by extension potentially tricked the user into executing malicious code. While very similar, this is a separate issue from...
DEBIAN-CVE-2022-22756
If a user was convinced to drag and drop an image to their desktop or other folder, the resulting object could have been changed into an executable script which would have run arbitrary code after the user clicked on it. This vulnerability affects Firefox 97, Thunderbird 91.6, and Firefox ESR 91....
USN-5504-1 firefox vulnerabilities
Multiple security issues were discovered in Firefox. If a user were tricked into opening a specially crafted website, an attacker could potentially exploit these to cause a denial of service, spoof the browser UI, bypass CSP restrictions, bypass sandboxed iframe restrictions, obtain sensitive...
Mozilla: Drag and dropping an image could have resulted in the dropped object being an executable
The Mozilla Foundation Security Advisory describes this flaw as: If a user was convinced to drag and drop an image to their desktop or other folder, the resulting object could have been changed into an executable script, which would have run arbitrary code after the user clicked it...
Mozilla: Dragging and dropping images exposes final URL after redirects (MFSA 2015-110)
Mozilla Firefox before 41.0 and Firefox ESR 38.x before 38.3 allow user-assisted remote attackers to bypass intended access restrictions and discover a redirect's target URL via crafted JavaScript code that executes after a drag-and-drop action of an image into a TEXTBOX element...