Studentmanage
Monthly
Stored XSS in DayCloud's StudentManage v1.0 allows an authenticated administrative user to inject malicious JavaScript via the 'Add A New Student' module, which executes in the browser of any user who subsequently views the affected record. The Scope:Changed metric confirms the injected script runs in a different security context (the victim's browser session), enabling session hijacking or credential theft. No active exploitation is confirmed via CISA KEV, though a public proof-of-concept exists on GitHub; EPSS at 0.22% (13th percentile) reflects low observed exploitation activity.
Stored cross-site scripting in DayCloud StudentManage v1.0 allows an authenticated administrator to inject malicious JavaScript via the Add A New Course module, which then executes in the browsers of other users who view the affected course content. The CVSS vector (PR:H/UI:R/S:C) confirms this requires admin-level access and victim interaction, with scope change reflecting script execution in a different user's browser context. A public proof-of-concept is available on GitHub, though EPSS sits at 0.22% (13th percentile), and the vulnerability is not listed in CISA KEV, indicating no observed widespread exploitation.
Stored cross-site scripting in DayCloud's StudentManage v1.0 allows authenticated administrators to inject malicious JavaScript via the Add A New Teacher module, which executes in victims' browsers when they load the affected page. The CVSS vector (PR:H, UI:R, S:C) confirms exploitation is gated behind high privileges and requires victim interaction, but the scope change flag reflects cross-user browser impact. A public proof-of-concept is available on GitHub; however, EPSS at 0.22% (13th percentile) and no CISA KEV listing indicate no confirmed widespread exploitation at time of analysis.
SQL injection in DayCloud StudentManage v1.0 lets an authenticated attacker inject arbitrary SQL through the /admin/adminStudentUrl component, exposing the full backing database. Rated CVSS 8.8, the flaw yields complete confidentiality, integrity, and availability impact against the application data store. Publicly available exploit code exists (referenced GitHub issue), though the product is an obscure open-source project on Gitee with no evidence of active exploitation.
Cross-site request forgery in StudentManage v1.0 (DayCloud) allows a remote attacker to perform unauthorized state-changing actions on behalf of an authenticated victim by luring them to a malicious webpage that auto-submits forged requests to the application. All default installations of v1.0 are affected per CPE data; no patched release has been identified. A publicly available proof-of-concept exploit exists, though no active exploitation has been recorded in CISA KEV and EPSS sits at a very low 0.19%.
Stored XSS in DayCloud's StudentManage v1.0 allows an authenticated administrative user to inject malicious JavaScript via the 'Add A New Student' module, which executes in the browser of any user who subsequently views the affected record. The Scope:Changed metric confirms the injected script runs in a different security context (the victim's browser session), enabling session hijacking or credential theft. No active exploitation is confirmed via CISA KEV, though a public proof-of-concept exists on GitHub; EPSS at 0.22% (13th percentile) reflects low observed exploitation activity.
Stored cross-site scripting in DayCloud StudentManage v1.0 allows an authenticated administrator to inject malicious JavaScript via the Add A New Course module, which then executes in the browsers of other users who view the affected course content. The CVSS vector (PR:H/UI:R/S:C) confirms this requires admin-level access and victim interaction, with scope change reflecting script execution in a different user's browser context. A public proof-of-concept is available on GitHub, though EPSS sits at 0.22% (13th percentile), and the vulnerability is not listed in CISA KEV, indicating no observed widespread exploitation.
Stored cross-site scripting in DayCloud's StudentManage v1.0 allows authenticated administrators to inject malicious JavaScript via the Add A New Teacher module, which executes in victims' browsers when they load the affected page. The CVSS vector (PR:H, UI:R, S:C) confirms exploitation is gated behind high privileges and requires victim interaction, but the scope change flag reflects cross-user browser impact. A public proof-of-concept is available on GitHub; however, EPSS at 0.22% (13th percentile) and no CISA KEV listing indicate no confirmed widespread exploitation at time of analysis.
SQL injection in DayCloud StudentManage v1.0 lets an authenticated attacker inject arbitrary SQL through the /admin/adminStudentUrl component, exposing the full backing database. Rated CVSS 8.8, the flaw yields complete confidentiality, integrity, and availability impact against the application data store. Publicly available exploit code exists (referenced GitHub issue), though the product is an obscure open-source project on Gitee with no evidence of active exploitation.
Cross-site request forgery in StudentManage v1.0 (DayCloud) allows a remote attacker to perform unauthorized state-changing actions on behalf of an authenticated victim by luring them to a malicious webpage that auto-submits forged requests to the application. All default installations of v1.0 are affected per CPE data; no patched release has been identified. A publicly available proof-of-concept exploit exists, though no active exploitation has been recorded in CISA KEV and EPSS sits at a very low 0.19%.