Note:
This project will be discontinued after December 13, 2021. [more]
Product:
Evolution
(Gnome)Repositories |
Unknown: This might be proprietary software. |
#Vulnerabilities | 21 |
Date | Id | Summary | Products | Score | Patch | Annotated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2021-02-01 | CVE-2021-3349 | GNOME Evolution through 3.38.3 produces a "Valid signature" message for an unknown identifier on a previously trusted key because Evolution does not retrieve enough information from the GnuPG API. NOTE: third parties dispute the significance of this issue, and dispute whether Evolution is the best place to change this behavior | Evolution | 3.3 | ||
2005-01-24 | CVE-2005-0102 | Integer overflow in camel-lock-helper in Evolution 2.0.2 and earlier allows local users or remote malicious POP3 servers to execute arbitrary code via a length value of -1, which leads to a zero byte memory allocation and a buffer overflow. | Debian_linux, Evolution | 9.8 | ||
2013-03-08 | CVE-2011-3201 | GNOME Evolution before 3.2.3 allows user-assisted remote attackers to read arbitrary files via the attachment parameter to a mailto: URL, which attaches the file to the email. | Evolution, Solaris, Enterprise_linux_desktop, Enterprise_linux_server, Enterprise_linux_workstation | N/A | ||
2020-02-06 | CVE-2013-4166 | The gpg_ctx_add_recipient function in camel/camel-gpg-context.c in GNOME Evolution 3.8.4 and earlier and Evolution Data Server 3.9.5 and earlier does not properly select the GPG key to use for email encryption, which might cause the email to be encrypted with the wrong key and allow remote attackers to obtain sensitive information. | Evolution, Evolution_data_server, Enterprise_linux_desktop, Enterprise_linux_server, Enterprise_linux_workstation | 7.5 | ||
2021-05-26 | CVE-2009-3721 | Multiple directory traversal and buffer overflow vulnerabilities were discovered in yTNEF, and in Evolution's TNEF parser that is derived from yTNEF. A crafted email could cause these applications to write data in arbitrary locations on the filesystem, crash, or potentially execute arbitrary code when decoding attachments. | Evolution, Ytnef | 7.8 | ||
2020-04-17 | CVE-2020-11879 | An issue was discovered in GNOME Evolution before 3.35.91. By using the proprietary (non-RFC6068) "mailto?attach=..." parameter, a website (or other source of mailto links) can make Evolution attach local files or directories to a composed email message without showing a warning to the user, as demonstrated by an attach=. value. | Evolution | N/A | ||
2018-05-16 | CVE-2017-17689 | The S/MIME specification allows a Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) malleability-gadget attack that can indirectly lead to plaintext exfiltration, aka EFAIL. | Nine, Mail, Airmail, Emclient, Maildroid, Mailmate, Evolution, Gmail, Horde_imp, Notes, Kmail, Trojita, Outlook, Thunderbird, Postbox, R2mail2, The_bat | 5.9 | ||
2019-02-11 | CVE-2018-15587 | GNOME Evolution through 3.28.2 is prone to OpenPGP signatures being spoofed for arbitrary messages using a specially crafted email that contains a valid signature from the entity to be impersonated as an attachment. | Debian_linux, Evolution | 6.5 | ||
2018-07-20 | CVE-2016-10727 | camel/providers/imapx/camel-imapx-server.c in the IMAPx component in GNOME evolution-data-server before 3.21.2 proceeds with cleartext data containing a password if the client wishes to use STARTTLS but the server will not use STARTTLS, which makes it easier for remote attackers to obtain sensitive information by sniffing the network. The server code was intended to report an error and not proceed, but the code was written incorrectly. | Ubuntu_linux, Evolution | 9.8 | ||
2009-05-14 | CVE-2009-1631 | The Mailer component in Evolution 2.26.1 and earlier uses world-readable permissions for the .evolution directory, and certain directories and files under .evolution/ related to local mail, which allows local users to obtain sensitive information by reading these files. | Evolution | N/A |