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    Home»Development»Security»Critical Linksys Router Flaw (CVE-2025-34037, CVSS 10.0) Actively Exploited by TheMoon Worm

    Critical Linksys Router Flaw (CVE-2025-34037, CVSS 10.0) Actively Exploited by TheMoon Worm

    June 24, 2025

    Critical Linksys Router Flaw (CVE-2025-34037, CVSS 10.0) Actively Exploited by TheMoon Worm

    A critical vulnerability in multiple Linksys E-Series routers is being actively exploited in the wild by a self-propagating malware campaign known as TheMoon worm, according to new research from the S …
    Read more


    Published Date:
    Jun 24, 2025 (1 hour, 2 minutes ago)

    Vulnerabilities has been mentioned in this article.

    CVE-2025-34037

    CVE-2023-46012

    CVE-2024-33788

    CVE-2024-33789

    Source: Read More

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    CVE-2025-46733 – OP-TEE Secure Storage API Panic Vulnerability

    July 4, 2025

    CVE ID : CVE-2025-46733

    Published : July 4, 2025, 2:15 p.m. | 4 hours, 57 minutes ago

    Description : OP-TEE is a Trusted Execution Environment (TEE) designed as companion to a non-secure Linux kernel running on Arm; Cortex-A cores using the TrustZone technology. In version 4.5.0, using a specially crafted tee-supplicant binary running in REE userspace, an attacker can trigger a panic in a TA that uses the libutee Secure Storage API. Many functions in libutee, specifically those which make up the Secure Storage API, will panic if a system call returns an unexpected return code. This behavior is mandated by the TEE Internal Core API specification. However, in OP-TEE’s implementation, return codes of secure storage operations are passed through unsanitized from the REE tee-supplicant, through the Linux kernel tee-driver, through the OP-TEE kernel, back to libutee. Thus, an attacker with access to REE userspace, and the ability to stop tee-supplicant and replace it with their own process (generally trivial for a root user, and depending on the way permissions are set up, potentially available even to less privileged users) can run a malicious tee-supplicant process that responds to storage requests with unexpected response codes, triggering a panic in the requesting TA. This is particularly dangerous for TAs built with `TA_FLAG_SINGLE_INSTANCE` (corresponding to `gpd.ta.singleInstance` and `TA_FLAG_INSTANCE_KEEP_ALIVE` (corresponding to `gpd.ta.keepAlive`). The behavior of these TAs may depend on memory that is preserved between sessions, and the ability of an attacker to panic the TA and reload it with a clean memory space can compromise the behavior of those TAs. A critical example of this is the optee_ftpm TA. It uses the kept alive memory to hold PCR values, which crucially must be non-resettable. An attacker who can trigger a panic in the fTPM TA can reset the PCRs, and then extend them PCRs with whatever they choose, falsifying boot measurements, accessing sealed data, and potentially more. The impact of this issue depends significantly on the behavior of affected TAs. For some, it could manifest as a denial of service, while for others, like the fTPM TA, it can result in the disclosure of sensitive data. Anyone running the fTPM TA is affected, but similar attacks may be possible on other TAs that leverage the Secure Storage API. A fix is available in commit 941a58d78c99c4754fbd4ec3079ec9e1d596af8f.

    Severity: 7.9 | HIGH

    Visit the link for more details, such as CVSS details, affected products, timeline, and more…

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