Ex6130
Monthly
System integrity tampering across a broad portfolio of NETGEAR home and small-business networking devices allows authenticated administrators on the local network to manipulate device configuration beyond intended boundaries, classified under CWE-15 (External Control of System or Configuration Setting). The CVSS 4.0 vector (AV:A/PR:H/VI:H) confirms that exploitation is constrained to adjacent network access with high-privilege credentials, yet the integrity impact on the vulnerable system is rated High. No public exploit code exists (SSVC: Exploitation none; CVSS E:U), and NETGEAR has released firmware patches for all affected product lines.
Insufficient input validation across 30+ NETGEAR router, range extender, and mesh networking models enables local network-adjacent modification of router software and functionality. The CVSS 4.0 vector assigns PR:N (no privileges required) and AV:A (adjacent network), yet the CVE description scopes the vulnerability to 'authenticated administrators' - the 'Authentication Bypass' tag supplied by NETGEAR suggests the input validation flaw may itself circumvent authentication controls, reconciling this apparent conflict. Integrity impact is rated High (VI:H) against the vulnerable system, meaning successful exploitation allows unauthorized firmware or configuration modification. No public exploit is identified at time of analysis (E:U), and this CVE is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog.
System integrity tampering across a broad portfolio of NETGEAR home and small-business networking devices allows authenticated administrators on the local network to manipulate device configuration beyond intended boundaries, classified under CWE-15 (External Control of System or Configuration Setting). The CVSS 4.0 vector (AV:A/PR:H/VI:H) confirms that exploitation is constrained to adjacent network access with high-privilege credentials, yet the integrity impact on the vulnerable system is rated High. No public exploit code exists (SSVC: Exploitation none; CVSS E:U), and NETGEAR has released firmware patches for all affected product lines.
Insufficient input validation across 30+ NETGEAR router, range extender, and mesh networking models enables local network-adjacent modification of router software and functionality. The CVSS 4.0 vector assigns PR:N (no privileges required) and AV:A (adjacent network), yet the CVE description scopes the vulnerability to 'authenticated administrators' - the 'Authentication Bypass' tag supplied by NETGEAR suggests the input validation flaw may itself circumvent authentication controls, reconciling this apparent conflict. Integrity impact is rated High (VI:H) against the vulnerable system, meaning successful exploitation allows unauthorized firmware or configuration modification. No public exploit is identified at time of analysis (E:U), and this CVE is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog.