Ms70
Monthly
A security flaw in the router's certificate validation process was discovered in the NETGEAR XR1000 Gaming Router and certain Nighthawk models that could allow an unauthorized person to remotely access and take control of the device.
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.
Integrity tampering in NETGEAR router and mesh network firmware allows authenticated administrators on the local network to submit insufficiently validated input, modifying the router's configuration or internal state in unintended ways. Affected devices span at least 27 product lines including MR/MS mesh units and R-series routers, all running firmware below specific patched versions identified by NETGEAR (EUVD-2026-35460). No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis, SSVC assigns no active exploitation and non-automatable status, and NETGEAR has released patched firmware across 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.
Remote code execution affects NETGEAR gaming routers (XR1000, MR70, MS70, RAXE500) when an attacker holds an on-path man-in-the-middle position between the device and the internet. The CVSS 4.0 vector (AV:N/AC:H/AT:P/PR:N/UI:N) confirms no privileges are needed on the target device but requires both high attack complexity and a specific network prerequisite - the ability to intercept and tamper with upstream traffic. No public exploit identified at time of analysis, and the vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog.
A security flaw in the router's certificate validation process was discovered in the NETGEAR XR1000 Gaming Router and certain Nighthawk models that could allow an unauthorized person to remotely access and take control of the device.
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.
Integrity tampering in NETGEAR router and mesh network firmware allows authenticated administrators on the local network to submit insufficiently validated input, modifying the router's configuration or internal state in unintended ways. Affected devices span at least 27 product lines including MR/MS mesh units and R-series routers, all running firmware below specific patched versions identified by NETGEAR (EUVD-2026-35460). No public exploit has been identified at time of analysis, SSVC assigns no active exploitation and non-automatable status, and NETGEAR has released patched firmware across 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.
Remote code execution affects NETGEAR gaming routers (XR1000, MR70, MS70, RAXE500) when an attacker holds an on-path man-in-the-middle position between the device and the internet. The CVSS 4.0 vector (AV:N/AC:H/AT:P/PR:N/UI:N) confirms no privileges are needed on the target device but requires both high attack complexity and a specific network prerequisite - the ability to intercept and tamper with upstream traffic. No public exploit identified at time of analysis, and the vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog.