Product:

Pcanywhere

(Symantec)
Repositories

Unknown:

This might be proprietary software.

#Vulnerabilities 18
Date Id Summary Products Score Patch Annotated
2006-07-24 CVE-2006-3786 Symantec pcAnywhere 12.5 uses weak integrity protection for .cif (aka caller or CallerID) files, which allows local users to generate a custom .cif file and modify the superuser flag. Pcanywhere N/A
2006-07-24 CVE-2006-3785 Symantec pcAnywhere 12.5 obfuscates the passwords in a GUI textbox with asterisks but does not encrypt them in the associated .cif (aka caller or CallerID) file, which allows local users to obtain the passwords from the window using tools such as Nirsoft Asterwin. Pcanywhere N/A
2006-07-24 CVE-2006-3784 Symantec pcAnywhere 12.5 uses weak default permissions for the "Symantec\pcAnywhere\Hosts" folder, which allows local users to gain privileges by inserting a superuser .cif (aka caller or CallerID) file into the folder, and then using a pcAnywhere client to login as a local administrator. Pcanywhere N/A
2005-12-01 CVE-2005-3934 Buffer overflow in Symantec pcAnywhere 11.0.1, 11.5.1, and all other 32-bit versions allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (application crash) via unknown attack vectors. Pcanywhere N/A
2005-06-16 CVE-2005-1970 Symantec pcAnywhere 10.5x and 11.x before 11.5, with "Launch with Windows" enabled, allows local users with physical access to execute arbitrary commands via the Caller Properties feature. Pcanywhere N/A
2003-12-15 CVE-2003-0936 Symantec PCAnywhere 10.x and 11, when started as a service, allows attackers to gain SYSTEM privileges via the help interface using AWHOST32.exe. Pcanywhere N/A
2000-04-09 CVE-2000-0273 PCAnywhere allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service by terminating the connection before PCAnywhere provides a login prompt. Pcanywhere N/A
1999-05-28 CVE-1999-1028 Symantec pcAnywhere 8.0 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (CPU utilization) via a large amount of data to port 5631. Pcanywhere N/A