This page aggregates publicly disclosed CVE and security risk information related to ceragon, with CVSS, EPSS, publication dates, and vulnerability intelligence data to help assess potential risk and remediation priority.
| CVE | Summary | Source | Max CVSS | EPSS % | Published | Updated |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2025-57175 | Siklu EtherHaul 8010 siklu-uimage-nxp-enc-10_6_2-18707-ea552dc00b devices have a static root password. | [email protected] | 6.4 | 0.13% | 2026-04-08 | 2026-06-17 |
| CVE-2015-0936 | Ceragon FibeAir IP-10 have a default SSH public key in the authorized_keys file for the mateidu user, which allows remote attackers to obtain SSH access by leveraging knowledge of the private key. | [email protected] | 9.8 | 78.09% | 2017-06-01 | 2026-06-17 |
| CVE-2017-9137 | Ceragon FibeAir IP-10 wireless radios through 7.2.0 have a default password of mateidu for the mateidu account (a hidden user account established by the vendor). This account can be accessed via both the web interface and SSH. In the web interface, this simply grants an attacker read-only access to the device's settings. However, when using SSH, this gives an attacker access to a Linux shell. NOTE: the vendor has commented "The mateidu user is a known user, which is mentioned in the FibeAir IP-1 | [email protected] | 7.3 | 0.81% | 2017-05-21 | 2026-06-17 |
| CVE-2016-10309 | In the GUI of Ceragon FibeAir IP-10 (before 7.2.0) devices, a remote attacker can bypass authentication by adding an ALBATROSS cookie with the value 0-4-11 to their browser. | [email protected] | 9.8 | 1.68% | 2017-03-30 | 2026-06-17 |
| CVE-2015-0924 | Ceragon FibeAir IP-10 bridges have a default password for the root account, which makes it easier for remote attackers to obtain access via a (1) HTTP, (2) SSH, (3) TELNET, or (4) CLI session. | [email protected] | 7.8 | 1.38% | 2015-01-17 | 2026-06-17 |