Hv 500S6 Ip Camera
Monthly
Arbitrary file upload in H.View HV-500S6 IP cameras lets an authenticated, high-privilege user (per CVSS PR:H) write unvalidated content to fixed, persistent filesystem paths reserved for trusted TLS certificate material, with no checks on file type, structure, or size. Because the planted data survives reboot, an attacker can corrupt or replace certificate stores to undermine device integrity, availability, and trust. There is no public exploit identified at time of analysis and the issue is not listed in CISA KEV, but it is the subject of a CISA ICS advisory (ICSA-26-176-05).
Authenticated command injection in H.View HV-500S6 IP cameras allows a logged-in user to inject unsanitized XML field values into the device's certificate generation interface, which are passed into a backend certificate-creation shell command and executed with elevated privileges. Because exploitation requires valid credentials (CVSS 4.0 PR:H) but is reachable over the network with low complexity, an attacker who obtains any account on the device can run arbitrary OS commands and take full control of the camera. No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis and the CVE is not listed in CISA KEV.
Arbitrary file upload in H.View HV-500S6 IP cameras lets an authenticated, high-privilege user (per CVSS PR:H) write unvalidated content to fixed, persistent filesystem paths reserved for trusted TLS certificate material, with no checks on file type, structure, or size. Because the planted data survives reboot, an attacker can corrupt or replace certificate stores to undermine device integrity, availability, and trust. There is no public exploit identified at time of analysis and the issue is not listed in CISA KEV, but it is the subject of a CISA ICS advisory (ICSA-26-176-05).
Authenticated command injection in H.View HV-500S6 IP cameras allows a logged-in user to inject unsanitized XML field values into the device's certificate generation interface, which are passed into a backend certificate-creation shell command and executed with elevated privileges. Because exploitation requires valid credentials (CVSS 4.0 PR:H) but is reachable over the network with low complexity, an attacker who obtains any account on the device can run arbitrary OS commands and take full control of the camera. No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis and the CVE is not listed in CISA KEV.