CVE-2013-0743
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Description
[REJECTED CVE] TURKTRUST, a certificate authority in Mozilla’s root program, had mis-issued two intermediate certificates to customers. One of the certificates was used for man-in-the-middle (MITM) traffic management of domain names that the customer did not legitimately own or control. An intermediate certificate that is used for MITM allows the holder of the certificate to decrypt and monitor communication within their network between the user and any website. Additionally, If the private key to one of the mis-issued intermediate certificates was compromised, then an attacker could use it to create SSL certificates containing domain names or IP addresses that the certificate holder does not legitimately own or control. An attacker armed with a fraudulent SSL certificate and an ability to control their victim’s network could impersonate websites in a way that would be undetectable to most users. Such certificates could deceive users into trusting websites appearing to originate from the domain owners, but actually containing malicious content or software.
Additional Information
- This content is not included.Bugzilla 890605: nss: Dis-trust TURKTRUST mis-issued *.google.com certificate
- FAQ: Frequently asked questions about CVE-2013-0743
- Offline Security Data data is available for integration with other systems. See Offline Security Data API to get started.
External References
Content from www.cve.org is not included.https://www.cve.org/CVERecord?id=CVE-2013-0743
Content from nvd.nist.gov is not included.https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2013-0743
Affected Packages and Issued Red Hat Security Errata
| Products / Services | Components | State | Errata |
|---|---|---|---|
| Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 | nss | Affected | |
| Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 | nspr | Fixed | RHSA-2013:0213 |
| Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 | nss | Fixed | RHSA-2013:0213 |
| Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 | nss-util | Fixed | RHSA-2013:0213 |
| Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 | ca-certificates | Not affected |
Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) Score Details
Important note
CVSS scores for open source components depend on vendor-specific factors (e.g. version or build chain). Therefore, Red Hat's score and impact rating can be different from NVD and other vendors. Red Hat remains the authoritative CVE Naming Authorities (CNA) source for its products and services (see Red Hat classifications ).
| CVSS v2 Score Breakdown | Red Hat | NVD |
|---|---|---|
| CVSS v2 Base Score | 4.3 | |
| Attack Vector | Network | |
| Access Complexity | Medium | |
| Authentication | None | |
| Confidentiality Impact | None | |
| Integrity Impact | Partial | |
| Availability Impact | None |
CVSS v2 Vector
Red Hat AV:N/AC:M/Au:N/C:N/I:P/A:N
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is Red Hat's CVSS v3 score or Impact different from other vendors?
For more information, see https://access.redhat.com/solutions/762393.
My product is listed as "Under investigation" or "Affected", when will Red Hat release a fix for this vulnerability?
- "Under investigation" doesn't necessarily mean that the product is affected by this vulnerability. It only means that our Analysis Team is still working on determining whether the product is affected and how it is affected.
- "Affected" means that our Analysis Team has determined that this product is affected by this vulnerability and might release a fix to address this in the near future.
What can I do if my product is listed as "Will not fix"?
Available options depend mostly on the Impact of the vulnerability and the current Life Cycle phase of your product. Overall, you have the following options:
- Upgrade to a supported product version that includes a fix for this vulnerability (recommended).
- Apply a mitigation (if one exists).
- Open a This content is not included.support case to request a prioritization of releasing a fix for this vulnerability.
What can I do if my product is listed as "Fix deferred"?
Available options depend mostly on the Impact of the vulnerability and the current Life Cycle phase of your product. Overall, you have the following options:
- Apply a mitigation (if one exists).
- Open a This content is not included.support case to request a prioritization of releasing a fix for this vulnerability.
- Red Hat Engineering focuses on addressing high-priority issues based on their complexity or limited lifecycle support. Therefore, lower-priority issues will not receive immediate fixes.
What is a mitigation?
I have a Red Hat product but it is not in the above list, is it affected?
Why is my security scanner reporting my product as vulnerable to this vulnerability even though my product version is fixed or not affected?
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