| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Cleartext storage of sensitive information in Azure Compute Gallery allows an authorized attacker to disclose information over a network. |
| Cleartext storage of sensitive information in Microsoft PC Manager allows an unauthorized attacker to bypass a security feature locally. |
| Dell ECS, versions 3.8.1.0 through 3.8.1.7, and Dell ObjectScale versions prior to 4.2.0.0, contains a Cleartext Storage of Sensitive Information vulnerability. A low privileged attacker with local access could potentially exploit this vulnerability, leading to Information disclosure. |
| In SAP Business One, sensitive information is written to the application�s memory dump files without obfuscation. Gaining access to this information could potentially lead to unauthorized operations within the B1 environment, including modification of company data. This issue results in a high impact on confidentiality and integrity, with no impact on availability. |
| Cleartext storage of sensitive information in Windows Kernel allows an unauthorized attacker to bypass a security feature locally. |
| Insecure Storage of Sensitive Information vulnerability in Birtech Information Technologies Industry and Trade Ltd. Co. Senseway allows Retrieve Embedded Sensitive Data.This issue affects Senseway: through 09022026.
NOTE: The vendor was contacted early about this disclosure but did not respond in any way. |
| IBM Concert 1.0.0 through 2.1.0 stores potentially sensitive information in log files that could be read by a local user. |
| FUXA is a web-based Process Visualization (SCADA/HMI/Dashboard) software. An information disclosure vulnerability in FUXA allows an unauthenticated, remote attacker to retrieve sensitive administrative database credentials. Exploitation allows an unauthenticated, remote attacker to obtain the full system configuration, including administrative credentials for the InfluxDB database. Possession of these credentials may allow an attacker to authenticate directly to the database service, enabling them to read, modify, or delete all historical process data, or perform a Denial of Service by corrupting the database. This affects FUXA through version 1.2.9. This issue has been patched in FUXA version 1.2.10. |
| Brocade SANnav before 2.4.0b logs the Brocade Fabric OS Switch admin password on the SANnav support save logs.
When OOM occurs on a Brocade SANnav server, the call stack trace for the Brocade switch is also collected in the heap dump file which contains this switch password in clear text. The vulnerability could allow a remote authenticated attacker with admin privilege able to access the SANnav logs or the supportsave to read the switch admin password. |
| The hard drives of the device are not encrypted using a full volume encryption feature such as BitLocker. This allows an attacker with physical access to the device to use an alternative operating system to interact with the hard drives, completely circumventing the Windows login. The attacker can read from and write to all files on the hard drives. |
| YugabyteDB Anywhere displays LDAP bind passwords configured via gflags in cleartext within the web UI. An authenticated user with access to the configuration view could obtain LDAP credentials, potentially enabling unauthorized access to external directory services. |
| A vulnerability in Brocade SANnav before 2.4.0b prints the
Password-Based Encryption (PBE) key in plaintext in the system audit log
file. The vulnerability could allow a remote authenticated attacker
with access to the audit logs to access the pbe key.
Note: The vulnerability is only triggered during a migration and not
in a new installation. The system audit logs are accessible only to a
privileged user on the server.
These audit logs are the local server VM’s audit logs and are not
controlled by SANnav. These logs are only visible to the server admin of
the host server and are not visible to the SANnav admin or any SANnav
user. |
| Cleartext Storage of Sensitive Information vulnerability in OpenText™ Vertica allows Retrieve Embedded Sensitive Data.
The vulnerability could read Vertica agent plaintext apikey.This issue affects Vertica versions: 23.X, 24.X, 25.X. |
| Brocade SANnav before Brocade SANnav 2.4.0b logs database passwords in clear text in the standby SANnav server, after disaster recovery failover. The vulnerability could allow a remote authenticated attacker with admin privilege able to access the SANnav logs or the supportsave to read the database password. |
| A vulnerability in the migration script for Brocade SANnav before 3.0 could allow the collection of database sql queries in the SANnav support save file. An attacker with access to Brocade SANnav supportsave file, could open the file and then obtain sensitive information such as details of database tables and encrypted passwords. |
| The vulnerability exists in BLUVOYIX due to an improper password storage implementation and subsequent exposure via unauthenticated APIs. An unauthenticated remote attacker could exploit this vulnerability by sending specially crafted HTTP requests to the vulnerable users API to retrieve the plaintext passwords of all user users. Successful exploitation of this vulnerability could allow the attacker to gain full access to customers' data and completely compromise the targeted platform by logging in using an exposed admin email address and password. |
| A vulnerability in the ascgshell, of
Brocade ASCG before 3.3.0 stores any command executed in the Command
Line Interface (CLI) in plain text within the command history. A local
authenticated user that can access sensitive information like passwords
within the CLI history leading to unauthorized access and potential data
breaches. |
| The web server of the Access Manager offers a functionality to download a backup of the local database stored on the device. This database contains the whole configuration. This includes encrypted MIFARE keys, card data, user PINs and much more. The PINs are even stored unencrypted. Combined with the fact that an attacker can easily get access to the backup functionality by abusing the session management issue (CVE-2025-59101), or by exploiting the weak default password (CVE-2025-59108), or by simply setting a new password without prior authentication via the SOAP API (CVE-2025-59097), it is easily possible to access the sensitive data on the device. |
| With physical access to the device and enough time an attacker can desolder the flash memory, modify it and then reinstall it because of missing encryption. Thus, essential files, such as "/etc/passwd", as well as stored certificates, cryptographic keys, stored PINs and so on can be modified and read, in order to gain SSH root access on the Linux-based K7 model. On the Windows CE based K5 model, the password for the Access Manager can additionally be read in plain text from the stored SQLite database. |
| A security issue was discovered within the legacy Ansible playbook component of Verve Asset Manager, caused by plaintext secrets incorrectly stored when a playbook is running. This component has been retired and has been optional since the 1.36 release in 2024. |