Amd Prof
Monthly
Man-in-the-middle attacks against AMD's optional desktop tools - AMD Management Console (AMC), AMD Ryzen Master, and AMD μProf - can lead to arbitrary code execution because the affected utilities transport data over plaintext HTTP rather than TLS. An attacker positioned on the network path between a victim workstation and the AMD endpoint can tamper with traffic (most plausibly update or telemetry channels) to substitute malicious content that is then executed by the tool. No public exploit identified at time of analysis and the issue is not in CISA KEV; EPSS data was not provided.
Unrestricted resource allocation in AMD µProf allows a local low-privileged user to consume excessive system resources, resulting in a loss of availability (denial of service). The CVSS 4.0 score of 6.8 reflects a locally exploitable, low-complexity attack requiring only low privileges with no user interaction needed. No public exploit code has been identified and this vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog at time of analysis; however, the straightforward nature of resource exhaustion attacks makes it a realistic local threat on systems where AMD µProf is deployed.
Improper access control in AMD µProf exposes a kernel-shared memory section to low-privileged local users, enabling writes that can crash the system or cause a denial of service. All AMD µProf versions prior to 5.3 are affected across supported platforms. No public exploit code has been identified and this CVE is not listed in CISA KEV, but the CVSS 4.0 vector (AV:L/AC:L/AT:N/PR:L/UI:N) indicates straightforward local exploitation requiring only basic user privileges with no additional complexity or user interaction.
Man-in-the-middle attacks against AMD's optional desktop tools - AMD Management Console (AMC), AMD Ryzen Master, and AMD μProf - can lead to arbitrary code execution because the affected utilities transport data over plaintext HTTP rather than TLS. An attacker positioned on the network path between a victim workstation and the AMD endpoint can tamper with traffic (most plausibly update or telemetry channels) to substitute malicious content that is then executed by the tool. No public exploit identified at time of analysis and the issue is not in CISA KEV; EPSS data was not provided.
Unrestricted resource allocation in AMD µProf allows a local low-privileged user to consume excessive system resources, resulting in a loss of availability (denial of service). The CVSS 4.0 score of 6.8 reflects a locally exploitable, low-complexity attack requiring only low privileges with no user interaction needed. No public exploit code has been identified and this vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog at time of analysis; however, the straightforward nature of resource exhaustion attacks makes it a realistic local threat on systems where AMD µProf is deployed.
Improper access control in AMD µProf exposes a kernel-shared memory section to low-privileged local users, enabling writes that can crash the system or cause a denial of service. All AMD µProf versions prior to 5.3 are affected across supported platforms. No public exploit code has been identified and this CVE is not listed in CISA KEV, but the CVSS 4.0 vector (AV:L/AC:L/AT:N/PR:L/UI:N) indicates straightforward local exploitation requiring only basic user privileges with no additional complexity or user interaction.