Aggregates CVE and security vulnerability intelligence across all gisle_aas-related products, including CVSS, EPSS, publication dates, and vulnerability intelligence data.
Common weakness patterns include vendor risk input validation, with potential vendor impact unexpected behavior across vendor surface production workloads and vendor surface software deployment use cases.
| CVE | Summary | Source | Max CVSS | EPSS % | Published | Updated |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2011-3597 | Eval injection vulnerability in the Digest module before 1.17 for Perl allows context-dependent attackers to execute arbitrary commands via the new constructor. | [email protected] | 7.5 | 13.53% | 2012-01-13 | 2026-06-16 |
| CVE-2011-0633 | The Net::HTTPS module in libwww-perl (LWP) before 6.00, as used in WWW::Mechanize, LWP::UserAgent, and other products, when running in environments that do not set the If-SSL-Cert-Subject header, does not enable full validation of SSL certificates by default, which allows remote attackers to spoof servers via man-in-the-middle (MITM) attacks involving hostnames that are not properly validated. NOTE: it could be argued that this is a design limitation of the Net::HTTPS API, and separate implemen | [email protected] | 4.3 | 4.25% | 2011-05-13 | 2026-06-16 |
| CVE-2010-2253 | lwp-download in libwww-perl before 5.835 does not reject downloads to filenames that begin with a . (dot) character, which allows remote servers to create or overwrite files via (1) a 3xx redirect to a URL with a crafted filename or (2) a Content-Disposition header that suggests a crafted filename, and possibly execute arbitrary code as a consequence of writing to a dotfile in a home directory. | [email protected] | 6.8 | 3.29% | 2010-07-06 | 2026-06-16 |
| CVE-2002-0703 | An interaction between the Perl MD5 module (perl-Digest-MD5) and Perl could produce incorrect MD5 checksums for UTF-8 data, which could prevent a system from properly verifying the integrity of the data. | [email protected] | 7.5 | 1.43% | 2002-07-26 | 2026-06-16 |