Argument injection in the kubectl_generic tool of mcp-server-kubernetes (npm, ≤ 3.6.2) enables Kubernetes bearer token exfiltration through indirect prompt injection, allowing privilege escalation to the operator's full RBAC permissions. An attacker with limited cluster access plants a crafted JSON payload in pod log output; when an AI agent using the MCP server reads those logs and follows the injected instruction, kubectl_generic calls kubectl with attacker-controlled --server and --insecure-skip-tls-verify flags, forwarding the operator's kubeconfig bearer token to an attacker-controlled HTTPS endpoint. A fully working public PoC exists confirmed end-to-end on a live kind cluster using Claude Haiku; the fix is available in version 3.7.0. No active exploitation per CISA KEV is confirmed at time of analysis.
SQL injection in NocoDB's Postgres formula engine exposes authenticated creators to arbitrary SQL execution via the unvalidated `direction` argument of the `ARRAYSORT(...)` formula function. All NocoDB instances on npm/nocodb versions prior to 2026.04.1 using Postgres-backed bases are affected; MySQL and SQLite backends are not. An attacker holding creator/owner-level `columnAdd` permission can inject persistent SQL that executes during column creation and re-executes on every subsequent read of the formula column, enabling confirmed denial-of-service and potentially broader data access depending on database-level permissions. No public exploit identified at time of analysis; this vulnerability is not listed in CISA KEV.
OpenAI Atlas before 1.2025.288.15 improperly exposed privileged browser APIs - including browser history access and tab open/close controls - to any web content loaded from *.openai.com origins, including the publicly accessible forum.openai.com. Because forum.openai.com harbored an independent cross-site scripting vulnerability, an attacker could chain the two weaknesses: inject a script via the forum XSS, which then silently invokes Atlas's privileged APIs against a visiting victim. No public exploit or CISA KEV listing has been confirmed at time of analysis, though a public security research blog (hacktron.ai) describes the attack surface; the EPSS score of 0.02% (4th percentile) reflects low observed exploitation probability.
### Impact If an attacker hacks into a vantage6 user's email account, they can 1) reset the password via email and then 2) reset the 2FA token via email. Rated medium severity (CVSS 5.9), this vulnerability is remotely exploitable, low attack complexity.
Out-of-bounds memory access in Samsung Android USB Driver for Windows (all versions prior to 1.9.5.0) allows a local attacker without elevated privileges to corrupt or read memory beyond allocated bounds, resulting in high availability impact and low integrity impact on the affected Windows host. Samsung has released version 1.9.5.0 as the corrective patch, documented under EUVD-2026-34810. No public exploit code exists and the vulnerability is not listed in CISA KEV at time of analysis, though the CVSS 4.0 AT:P modifier signals a required target-specific condition that narrows exploitability.
Inappropriate implementation in Google Chrome's DevTools component prior to version 149.0.7827.53 allows a crafted Chrome Extension to access and read sensitive data from process memory. Exploitation requires social engineering a target user into installing a malicious extension, after which the extension can invoke under-guarded DevTools APIs to extract potentially sensitive in-memory content such as credentials, tokens, or session data. No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis, and the EPSS score of 0.01% indicates very low observed exploitation probability; however, the confidentiality impact is rated High by CVSS.
Throttler slot exhaustion in klever-go's account-data trie syncer enables unauthenticated remote attackers to permanently consume all `NumGoRoutinesThrottler` slots by causing repeated trie-node sync failures or timeouts during epoch bootstrap, halting node participation in consensus. Both `userAccountsSyncer.syncDataTrie()` and `kappAccountsSyncer.syncDataTrie()` call `StartProcessing()` but omit `EndProcessing()` on three distinct error paths, meaning each failed sync permanently leaks one slot for the lifetime of that throttler instance. A runtime proof-of-concept is publicly confirmed in GHSA-fw38-pc54-jvx9 showing that exactly N timeout failures exhaust a capacity-N throttler; no CISA KEV listing exists at time of analysis, but the operational impact on bootstrapping validators is severe.
Cross-site scripting in the Arista Edge Threat Management Next Generation Firewall web UI dashboard allows a high-privileged attacker to inject unvalidated input that is reflected back into administrative profiles, enabling script execution in the context of other administrative sessions. The vulnerability carries a CVSS 4.0 score of 5.8 (Medium), with confidentiality impact rated High on the vulnerable system - consistent with session token or credential harvesting from targeted admin accounts. No public exploit code exists and this CVE is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog at time of analysis.
Arbitrary file write in the npm decompress package (all versions) exploits a second-generation Zip Slip bypass that circumvents protections introduced in the CVE-2020-12265 fix. By crafting a ZIP archive where a symlink entry and a same-named regular file share an identical path, an attacker leverages microtask scheduling order to write file contents through the unresolved symlink to arbitrary locations outside the extraction output directory, creating a realistic path to remote code execution. Publicly available exploit code exists per the E:P temporal modifier and a published PoC Gist, elevating real-world concern especially for applications processing untrusted archives in automated pipelines.
Use-after-free read in X.Org X server and Xwayland's CreateSaverWindow() function exposes heap memory to local authenticated users, resulting in information disclosure. A low-privileged local X client can manipulate window attributes and force screen saver activation to trigger a read from freed memory, leaking potentially sensitive heap contents (C:H/I:N/A:N). No public exploit identified at time of analysis, and this vulnerability is not listed in CISA KEV; however, an upstream fix commit has been published and a Red Hat advisory is available.
Out-of-bounds read in X.Org X server and Xwayland's GLX extension handler `__glXDisp_ChangeDrawableAttributes()` allows a local low-privileged user to disclose sensitive memory contents from the X server process. Faulty size validation permits reading a client-controlled number of bytes beyond the request buffer boundary, resulting in high confidentiality impact per CVSS. A secondary write path exists in the same function but is gated behind byte-swapped client support, which is disabled by default, substantially limiting its practical exposure. No public exploit code and no CISA KEV listing have been identified at time of analysis.
Stored cross-site scripting in Znuny's user preferences mechanism allows an authenticated low-privileged attacker to inject persistent malicious scripts that execute in other users' browsers, crossing security boundaries (S:C) to potentially compromise administrator sessions or perform unauthorized actions on their behalf. Both the LTS branch (before 6.5.21) and the main release branch (before 7.3.3) are affected. Vendor-released patches exist for both branches; no public exploit identified at time of analysis and the vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog.
Navigation restriction bypass in Google Chrome's Downloads subsystem prior to version 149.0.7827.53 enables a remote unauthenticated attacker to circumvent browser navigation controls by luring a user to a crafted HTML page. The flaw is rooted in an inappropriate implementation classified as CWE-346 (Origin Validation Error), meaning Chrome fails to properly validate the origin of requests or data within the Downloads flow. Rated Medium by CVSS (5.4) and Low by Chromium's own severity scale, no public exploit code or CISA KEV listing has been identified at time of analysis.
Persistent session token access in HAX CMS (haxtheweb) prior to version 26.0.0 allows attackers who possess a valid authentication token to retain access to CMS administrative functions and metadata even after the legitimate user has logged out. The root cause is CWE-613 (Insufficient Session Expiration): authentication tokens are not invalidated server-side upon logout, meaning the session termination mechanism is cosmetic rather than functional. Both PHP and NodeJS backend deployments are affected. No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis, and no CISA KEV listing exists, but the fix is available in version 26.0.0.
Path traversal in NocoDB allows authenticated users with base-create permission to point a SQLite data source at any file readable or writable by the NocoDB server process, including its own internal state databases. The flaw exists in the SQLite client and base/integration create services, which accept a caller-supplied filename and pass it directly to filesystem calls without any path restriction or canonicalization. An attacker exploiting this can read or overwrite `noco.db`, tenant databases under `nc_minimal_dbs/`, or any other file accessible to the NocoDB process - enabling full internal state disclosure, cross-tenant data access, and destructive modification. No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis, and a vendor-released patch exists in version 2026.05.1.
Session variable manipulation in Open XDMoD prior to version 11.0.3 enables low-privileged authenticated remote attackers to bypass access control logic by submitting a crafted HTTPS POST request that overrides a session variable governing authorization decisions. Exploitation is contingent on the optional Job Performance (SUPReMM) module being installed; without it, the vulnerable code path is not reachable. No public exploit code exists and no active exploitation has been identified at time of analysis; the vendor released a fix in v11.0.3 on 2026-05-12 following private disclosure on 2026-04-06.
Server-Side Request Forgery in NocoDB (npm/nocodb, versions up to and including 2026.05.0) allows authenticated users with connection-test permission to direct the NocoDB server process to open raw TCP sockets to attacker-specified internal destinations, including Redis instances, cloud metadata endpoints (e.g., AWS IMDSv1 at 169.254.169.254), and internal databases. The vulnerable connection-test endpoint accepted user-supplied database hostnames without DNS resolution or address-range validation, effectively making NocoDB an unauthenticated SSRF proxy to the internal network from the server's vantage point. No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis; a vendor-released patch exists in version 2026.05.1.
Server-side request forgery in linqi's custom process creation feature allows authenticated attackers to conduct internal network reconnaissance by forcing the server to issue arbitrary outbound HTTP requests. Affected product is linqi by linqi GmbH (all versions per CPE cpe:2.3:a:linqi_gmbh:linqi:*). By embedding a crafted HTTP Request component inside a custom workflow process, the attacker can enumerate internal hosts and open ports through differential response analysis (Success, Failed, or 504 Gateway Time-out). No public exploit code has been identified at time of analysis, and the vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog.
SQL injection in NocoDB's bulk groupBy endpoint allows authenticated users holding column-create or column-rename permissions to read arbitrary data from the connected database by crafting a malicious column title. Affected versions are all NocoDB npm releases up to and including 2026.05.0; a vendor-released patch is available in 2026.05.1. No public exploit code has been identified and the vulnerability is not listed in CISA KEV, but the low complexity of exploitation once authenticated and the direct database read impact make prompt patching a priority for any internet-exposed NocoDB deployment.
HelloTalk through 3.4.1 stores full-precision GPS coordinates even when the user had intended to share only a country or city. Rated medium severity (CVSS 5.3), this vulnerability is remotely exploitable, no authentication required, low attack complexity. No vendor patch available.
Same-origin policy bypass in Google Chrome's IndexedDB implementation affects all versions prior to 149.0.7827.53, enabling an attacker who has already compromised the renderer process to cross origin boundaries via a crafted HTML page. The integrity-only impact (C:N/I:H/A:N) means a successful exploitation could allow unauthorized writes or data manipulation across origins, but does not directly expose confidential data. No public exploit code has been identified at time of analysis, and Google's own Chromium security team rated this Low severity; a vendor-released patch is available at version 149.0.7827.53.
Improper authorization in Samsung's AppBlock application on Android 15 and 16 devices allows a local, low-privileged attacker to launch arbitrary Android Activities without proper permission checks. Exploitation requires passive user interaction (CVSS 4.0 UI:P) and local device access, but the confidentiality impact on the vulnerable system is rated High (VC:H), consistent with the reported Information Disclosure tag. No public exploit code exists and the vulnerability is not listed in CISA's KEV catalog at time of analysis; Samsung has released a patch in SMR Jun-2026 Release 1.
Open redirect in NocoDB's client-side hashRedirect plugin allows any attacker to silently send visitors from a legitimate NocoDB origin to an attacker-controlled domain by embedding a protocol-relative path in the URL hash fragment. All NocoDB npm releases prior to 2026.04.1 are affected; the flaw exists in `packages/nc-gui/plugins/hashRedirect.client.ts` where a single `startsWith('/')` check fails to exclude `//attacker.com/...` paths, which browsers resolve as absolute URLs. No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis, but the technique requires zero tooling and no authentication, making phishing campaigns against NocoDB users trivially constructable.
Reflected XSS in NocoDB's password-reset flow allows an unauthenticated attacker to execute arbitrary JavaScript in the victim's browser within the NocoDB origin by sending a crafted password-reset link. The vulnerability stems from the EJS server-side template rendering the reset token directly into a JavaScript string literal without escaping single quotes or backslashes, enabling string-context escape. Any NocoDB instance running versions prior to 2026.04.1 is affected; no public exploit identified at time of analysis, though the advisory includes a functional proof-of-concept payload.
Cross-site scripting in Twig's profiler HtmlDumper component (twig/twig >= 3.0.0, < 3.26.0) allows an attacker who can control template names - via an ArrayLoader key, a database-backed loader row ID, or similar - to inject arbitrary HTML that executes in any browser rendering the profiler output. The root cause is a missing htmlspecialchars() call in HtmlDumper::formatTemplate() and related methods before writing Profile::getTemplate() and Profile::getName() into the HTML response. No public exploit or CISA KEV listing has been identified at time of analysis, but the vendor confirmed the issue and shipped a fix in v3.26.0 as part of a coordinated batch of security releases.
Stored cross-site scripting in Lyrion Music Server 9.2.0 allows remote attackers to inject JavaScript payloads via media file metadata fields (GENRE, ARTIST, ALBUM) that execute when other users browse the web interface. With CVSS 7.2 and a changed scope, successful exploitation can reach management functions and disclose settings. No public exploit identified at time of analysis, and no CISA KEV listing.
Improper access control in the AuditLogService component of Samsung Mobile Devices running Android 16 exposes sensitive audit log information to local attackers. The flaw, disclosed and patched by Samsung Mobile as part of their June 2026 Security Maintenance Release (SMR Jun-2026 Release 1), enables a local attacker without special privileges to both read and potentially modify sensitive data surfaced by the audit logging subsystem. No public exploit code has been identified at time of analysis, and this vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog.
Discretionary access control bypass in Google Chrome's Cast feature (prior to 149.0.7827.53) allows an attacker positioned on the local network segment to interfere with Cast functionality via crafted malicious network traffic. The vulnerability stems from improper privilege management (CWE-269) within the Cast implementation, resulting in limited confidentiality and integrity impact (CVSS 5.1). No public exploit code has been identified at time of analysis, and CISA KEV listing is absent; however, the no-authentication-required condition and the network-adjacent attack surface make this relevant for environments where Chrome's Cast feature is actively used on shared or untrusted network segments.
Reflected cross-site scripting in Lyrion Music Server 9.2.0 allows unauthenticated remote attackers to inject arbitrary JavaScript into victims' browsers via unsanitized advanced search parameters, enabling session token theft and account hijacking with a single user-click interaction. The changed scope (S:C) in the CVSS vector confirms the injected script executes outside the origin of the vulnerable application, amplifying cross-domain impact. No public exploit identified at time of analysis and no CISA KEV listing, but the ZeroScience Lab advisory reference is a known PoC-publishing outlet - PoC availability should be treated as likely pending confirmation.
Stored cross-site scripting in Lyrion Music Server 9.2.0's log viewer allows unauthenticated remote attackers to inject persistent JavaScript via unescaped template variables, executing arbitrary scripts in the browsers of administrators or other users who view the logs. Injection vectors include the search, lines, and path query parameters as well as indirect channels such as URLs, User-Agent headers, stream titles, and player names that get written to the server log. No public exploit identified at time of analysis, but the CVSS 7.2 score reflects a scope-changed impact (S:C) due to the cross-origin nature of XSS.
Integer overflow in the WebView component of Google Chrome on Android (prior to 149.0.7827.53) allows a local, low-privileged attacker to crash the application via a crafted malicious file, resulting in a denial of service. The attack requires user interaction - the victim must open or process the malicious file through a WebView-rendered surface. No public exploit code has been identified at time of analysis, and the EPSS score of 0.01% (1st percentile) indicates extremely low real-world exploitation probability; the vendor has rated this Low severity.
Integer overflow in Chrome's Chromoting (Remote Desktop) component on Windows exposes process memory contents to local authenticated attackers via crafted ETW (Event Tracing for Windows) events. Affected versions are all Chrome releases on Windows prior to 149.0.7827.53. With CVSS confidentiality impact rated High and no public exploit identified at time of analysis, the practical risk is constrained by the local access and user interaction requirements, though sensitive data such as credentials or session tokens resident in process memory could be disclosed. EPSS score of 0.01% (1st percentile) confirms low observed exploitation probability.
Samsung Auto for Android exposes audio configuration functionality through improperly exported application components, allowing a local attacker with low privileges to arbitrarily modify audio settings without authorization. Affected versions are Samsung Auto prior to 3.1.2.61 on Android 15 and prior to 3.2.0.38 on Android 16, as confirmed by the Samsung Mobile vendor advisory and EUVD-2026-34806. No public exploit is identified at time of analysis and this vulnerability has not been added to the CISA KEV catalog, placing it at low real-world priority despite the straightforward local attack path.
ImsSettings on Samsung Mobile Devices (Android 14, 15, 16) exposes an improperly exported Android application component, enabling locally authenticated low-privilege attackers to invoke the component and trigger its logging function, resulting in limited information disclosure. The vulnerability is patched in Samsung's SMR Jun-2026 Release 1 and is reported exclusively by Samsung Mobile. No public exploit code and no CISA KEV listing have been identified at time of analysis, and the CVSS 4.0 score of 4.8 (Medium) reflects the narrow, local-only impact.
Use-after-free in the Network component of Google Chrome prior to version 149.0.7827.53 enables an attacker who has already compromised the renderer process to read potentially sensitive data from process memory by delivering a crafted HTML page. The Changed scope (S:C) in the CVSS vector confirms the vulnerability crosses security boundaries - specifically from the renderer sandbox into the Network process - making this a secondary exploitation step rather than an initial access vector. No public exploit code exists and the vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog; Google has released a patched stable channel build.
Improper privilege handling in Samsung's SecTelephonyProvider component allows local attackers on Samsung Mobile Devices to access files that should be restricted to privileged processes. Affected devices run Android 14, 15, and 16 prior to the SMR Jun-2026 Release 1 patch, spanning the full current Samsung Android support matrix. No public exploit code exists and no KEV listing has been issued; the CVSS 4.0 score of 4.6 reflects constrained real-world impact due to required local access and active user interaction.
Arbitrary file access in Mimecast Incydr versions before 2.6.0 exposes endpoints to unauthorized read and write operations against files outside the application's intended scope, rooted in incorrect permission assignments (CWE-732). The CVSS 3.1 Changed Scope indicator (S:C) confirms that exploitation can reach resources beyond the Incydr agent boundary - meaningful given that Incydr is itself an insider risk monitoring platform that may store sensitive activity logs and configuration on the endpoint. Mimecast has released version 2.6.0 as the fix; no public exploit identified at time of analysis.
UI spoofing in Google Chrome's Wallet component (versions prior to 149.0.7827.53) permits a remote attacker who has already achieved renderer process compromise to manipulate the browser's payment/credential interface by delivering a crafted HTML page. The CVSS vector (AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:R/S:U/C:N/I:L/A:N) scores this at 4.3 Medium, but the explicit renderer-compromise prerequisite in the description significantly narrows real-world attack surface beyond what those scores imply. No public exploit identified at time of analysis, EPSS sits at 0.05% (15th percentile), there is no CISA KEV listing, and Google's own Chromium team rates this Low severity - all signals converging on limited exploitation likelihood.
UI spoofing in Google Chrome on iOS (prior to 149.0.7827.53) allows an unauthenticated remote attacker to present a deceptive interface to users by serving a crafted HTML page, specifically targeting the Signin flow. The root cause is an inappropriate implementation classified under CWE-20 (Improper Input Validation), meaning Chrome fails to sufficiently validate or constrain inputs that influence the rendered signin UI. No public exploit code exists and no active exploitation has been confirmed; EPSS of 0.05% (15th percentile) indicates very low near-term exploitation probability, consistent with the Low Chromium severity rating.
UI spoofing in Google Chrome's PDF implementation prior to version 149.0.7827.53 can be triggered by a remote attacker who has already compromised the renderer process, using a crafted HTML page to mislead users through false interface elements. The vulnerability is rated Low severity by the Chromium security team, with a CVSS score of 4.3, and carries a negligible exploitation probability (EPSS 0.05%, 15th percentile). No public exploit code exists and the vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog, making real-world exploitation highly unlikely outside of sophisticated, chained attack scenarios.
Authorization bypass in the Alba Board WordPress plugin (all versions through 2.1.3) exposes private project card data to unauthorized access. Despite the CVSS vector assigning PR:L (low privileges required), the vulnerability description explicitly reveals a more severe exploitation path: the AJAX handler is registered under the wp_ajax_nopriv_ hook, and the required nonce is broadcast to all site visitors via wp_localize_script on any page rendering the [alba_board] shortcode - enabling fully unauthenticated access to private alba_card records including titles, descriptions, assignees, due dates, tags, and comments. No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis and this CVE is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog, though the vulnerable code path is publicly browsable in the WordPress plugin repository.
UI spoofing via Chrome's History component (versions prior to 149.0.7827.53) lets an unauthenticated remote attacker deceive users through a crafted HTML page, exploiting insufficient policy enforcement in History navigation handling. The attacker can manipulate browser UI elements perceived by the victim, creating phishing-class deception without any confidentiality or availability impact - consistent with Chromium's own 'Low' severity rating. No public exploit code exists and EPSS sits at 0.03% (11th percentile), indicating very low probability of in-the-wild exploitation at time of analysis.
UI spoofing in Google Chrome's Passwords component (all versions prior to 149.0.7827.53) allows a remote unauthenticated attacker to visually mislead users via a crafted HTML page, exploiting CWE-451 misrepresentation of critical UI information. The integrity-only impact (CVSS I:L, C:N, A:N) is consistent with a spoofed password prompt or save dialog that could trick users into revealing credentials or accepting malicious input. No public exploit code exists, EPSS is 0.03% (11th percentile), and CISA has not added this to KEV, making this a low operational priority despite being network-reachable.
UI spoofing in Google Chrome for iOS prior to version 149.0.7827.53 enables a remote unauthenticated attacker to misrepresent critical browser interface elements through a crafted HTML page, requiring only that the victim visit the malicious page. The vulnerability stems from an inappropriate implementation specific to the iOS platform build of Chrome (CWE-451), with impact limited to integrity - no confidentiality or availability loss. No public exploit identified at time of analysis; EPSS sits at 0.03% (11th percentile) and Chromium's own severity rating is Low, aligning with the constrained real-world impact.
UI spoofing in Google Chrome's Payments component prior to version 149.0.7827.53 enables a remote unauthenticated attacker to mislead users about payment interface elements via a crafted HTML page. The vulnerability stems from inappropriate implementation logic (CWE-451) that allows visual misrepresentation of critical payment-related UI, potentially facilitating phishing or payment fraud against end users who interact with a malicious page. No public exploit code has been identified at time of analysis, and Chromium's internal severity rating is Low, consistent with its limited integrity-only, user-interaction-dependent impact.
Off-by-one out-of-bounds read in 7-Zip's UEFI firmware image parser (versions 9.21-26.00) allows a network-adjacent attacker to trigger either a denial of service (application crash) or minor information disclosure of an adjacent static .rdata string literal into archive metadata, simply by convincing a user to open a crafted UEFI-containing archive. The vulnerability is reached automatically upon archive open with no special user action beyond opening the file, and affects default 7-Zip installations because the UEFI handler is enabled out-of-the-box. No public exploit code has been identified at time of analysis, no KEV listing exists, and the impact is bounded: there is no write primitive and no disclosure of heap data, secrets, or ASLR base addresses.
Off-by-one heap out-of-bounds read in 7-Zip's WIM archive handler (versions 9.34-26.00) allows a remote unauthenticated attacker to trigger denial of service - and potentially minor information disclosure - by delivering a crafted WIM file. The vulnerability is zero-click exploitable in the GUI: 7zFM.exe automatically calls GetRawProp(kpidNtSecure) for every listed item, triggering the OOB read without any additional user interaction beyond opening or navigating to the malicious archive. No public exploit code has been identified at time of analysis, and the vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog.
Heap memory disclosure in 7-Zip 9.34 through 26.00 (32-bit builds only) allows a remote unauthenticated attacker to leak arbitrary heap contents into attacker-controlled extracted files by supplying a crafted SquashFS archive. The root cause is a 32-bit integer overflow in the SquashFS ReadBlock function: because size_t is 32 bits on 32-bit builds, the addition of offsetInBlock and blockSize wraps modulo 2³², bypassing the fragment bounds check and directing memcpy to read heap memory preceding the intended cache buffer. No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis, and no CISA KEV listing exists. Version 26.01 patches the issue.
UI spoofing in Google Chrome's Permissions subsystem prior to version 149.0.7827.53 enables remote unauthenticated attackers to misrepresent the browser's permission interface by delivering a crafted HTML page to a victim. The flaw (CWE-451) results in low-integrity impact - the attacker can deceive a user into perceiving a false permissions state, potentially manipulating consent decisions. No public exploit code exists, EPSS is 0.03% (8th percentile), CISA SSVC rates exploitation as none, and Chromium's own severity assessment is Low, placing this firmly in the routine-patching tier rather than an urgent response priority.
Same-origin policy bypass in Google Chrome's Cast component exposes users to limited cross-origin integrity violations via a crafted HTML page, affecting all desktop Chrome versions prior to 149.0.7827.53. An unauthenticated remote attacker can circumvent the browser's fundamental cross-origin boundary by exploiting insufficient input validation in the Cast subsystem, achieving a low-severity integrity impact against a visiting user. No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis, and the EPSS score of 0.02% (6th percentile) combined with Chromium's own 'Low' severity rating indicate minimal real-world exploitation risk.