Mpos M6 Plus
Monthly
The Shenzhen HCC Technology MPOS M6 PLUS device running firmware version 1V.31-N contains a cleartext transmission vulnerability in its Cardholder Data Handler component that allows attackers on the local network to intercept sensitive information. An attacker with network access can manipulate the affected component to force transmission of cardholder data in cleartext, compromising payment card information. A publicly available proof-of-concept exists on GitHub, and the vulnerability has a CVSS score of 3.1 (low severity) due to high attack complexity requirements, though the exploitation difficulty rating suggests real-world risk depends heavily on network proximity and attacker capabilities.
This vulnerability is an authentication bypass in the Bluetooth Handler component of Shenzhen HCC Technology MPOS M6 PLUS version 1V.31-N, exploitable via capture-replay attacks. An unauthenticated attacker on the local network can manipulate Bluetooth communications to bypass authentication mechanisms and gain unauthorized access with high attack complexity. A proof-of-concept exploit is publicly available on GitHub, and the vendor has not responded to disclosure attempts, leaving affected systems without an official patch.
Unauthenticated Bluetooth access in the Shenzhen HCC Technology MPOS M6 PLUS 1V.31-N allows attackers on the local network to manipulate the device's Bluetooth functionality, compromising confidentiality and integrity. Public exploit code exists for this vulnerability, though exploitation requires complex local network positioning and timing. No patch is currently available from the vendor.
The Shenzhen HCC Technology MPOS M6 PLUS device running firmware version 1V.31-N contains a cleartext transmission vulnerability in its Cardholder Data Handler component that allows attackers on the local network to intercept sensitive information. An attacker with network access can manipulate the affected component to force transmission of cardholder data in cleartext, compromising payment card information. A publicly available proof-of-concept exists on GitHub, and the vulnerability has a CVSS score of 3.1 (low severity) due to high attack complexity requirements, though the exploitation difficulty rating suggests real-world risk depends heavily on network proximity and attacker capabilities.
This vulnerability is an authentication bypass in the Bluetooth Handler component of Shenzhen HCC Technology MPOS M6 PLUS version 1V.31-N, exploitable via capture-replay attacks. An unauthenticated attacker on the local network can manipulate Bluetooth communications to bypass authentication mechanisms and gain unauthorized access with high attack complexity. A proof-of-concept exploit is publicly available on GitHub, and the vendor has not responded to disclosure attempts, leaving affected systems without an official patch.
Unauthenticated Bluetooth access in the Shenzhen HCC Technology MPOS M6 PLUS 1V.31-N allows attackers on the local network to manipulate the device's Bluetooth functionality, compromising confidentiality and integrity. Public exploit code exists for this vulnerability, though exploitation requires complex local network positioning and timing. No patch is currently available from the vendor.