| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Anviz CX2 Lite and CX7 are vulnerable to unauthenticated POST requests that modify debug
settings (e.g., enabling SSH), allowing unauthorized state changes that
can facilitate later compromise. |
| Anviz CX7 Firmware is vulnerable to the most recently captured test photo that can be
retrieved without authentication, revealing sensitive operational
imagery. |
| Anviz CX2 Lite and CX7 are vulnerable to unverified update packages that can be uploaded. The
device unpacks and executes a script resulting in unauthenticated remote
code execution. |
| Anviz CrossChex Standard
lacks source verification in the client/server channel, enabling TCP
packet injection by an attacker on the same network to alter or disrupt
application traffic. |
| Anviz CX7 Firmware is vulnerable to an authenticated CSV upload which allows path traversal
to overwrite arbitrary files (e.g., /etc/shadow), enabling unauthorized
SSH access when combined with debug‑setting changes |
| Anviz CX7 Firmware is
vulnerable because the application embeds reusable certificate/key
material, enabling decryption of MQTT traffic and potential interaction
with device messaging channels at scale. |
| Anviz CX2 Lite and CX7 are vulnerable to unauthenticated access that discloses debug
configuration details (e.g., SSH/RTTY status), assisting attackers in
reconnaissance against the device. |
| Anviz CrossChex Standard is vulnerable when an attacker manipulates the TDS7 PreLogin to disable
encryption, causing database credentials to be sent in plaintext and
enabling unauthorized database access. |
| Anviz CX2 Lite is vulnerable to an authenticated command injection via a
filename parameter that enables arbitrary command execution (e.g.,
starting telnetd), resulting in root‑level access. |
| Anviz CX2 Lite and CX7 are vulnerable to unauthenticated firmware uploads. This causes crafted
archives to be accepted, enabling attackers to plant and execute code
and obtain a reverse shell. |
| Anviz CX7 Firmware is vulnerable to an unauthenticated POST to the device that captures
a photo with the front facing camera, exposing visual information about
the deployment environment. |
| Anviz CX2 Lite and CX7 administrative sessions occur over HTTP, enabling
on‑path attackers to sniff credentials and session data, which can be
used to compromise the device. |
| Anviz AIM CrossChex Standard 4.3.6.0 contains a CSV injection vulnerability that allows attackers to execute commands by inserting malicious formulas in user import fields. Attackers can craft payloads in fields like 'Name', 'Gender', or 'Position' to trigger Excel macro execution when importing user data. |
| Anviz CrossChex access control management software 4.3.8.0 and 4.3.12 is vulnerable to a buffer overflow vulnerability. |
| Anviz access control devices allow unverified password change which allows remote attackers to change the administrator password without prior authentication. |
| Anviz access control devices are vulnerable to replay attacks which could allow attackers to intercept and replay open door requests. |
| Anviz access control devices allow remote attackers to issue commands without a password. |
| The Anviz Management System for access control has insufficient logging for device events such as door open requests. |
| Anviz access control devices expose private Information (pin code and name) by allowing remote attackers to query this information without credentials via port tcp/5010. |
| Anviz access control devices expose credentials (names and passwords) by allowing remote attackers to query this information without credentials via port tcp/5010. |