Security Advisory - Curesec Research Team 1. Introduction Affected Product: Opendocman 1.3.4 Fixed in: 1.3.5 Fixed Version Link: http://www.opendocman.com/free-download/ Vendor Website: http://www.opendocman.com/ Vulnerability Type: HTML Injection Remote Exploitable: Yes Reported to vendor: 11/21/2015 Disclosed to public: 02/01/2016 Release mode: Coordinated Release CVE: n/a Credits Tim Coen of Curesec GmbH 2. Overview CVSS Medium 4.3 AV:N/AC:M/Au:N/C:N/I:P/A:N Description To defend against XSS and similar attacks, opendocman depends on a function that filters all input to remove dangerous tags and attributes. The filter does filter out all simple approaches to XSS, but it still leaves an attacker with large control over the look and functionality of the website. This can lead to phishing attacks, privilege escalation, defacement, and may lead to XSS with older browsers. There are likely other possibilities for attackers. It is recommended to HTML-encode user input before echoing it to mitigate these issues, instead of relying on input filtering. These issues are present across the application and are reflected as well as persistent, for example via the profile or comments. 3. Proof of Concept Privilege Escalation A registered user can exploit this issue in combination with social engineering to gain admin rights: - Change any profile field, such as last name, to: Smith"> Phishing & Defacement Attacker-controlled elements can be shown in places where a user would only expect application-controlled data, not user data, which can be used in phishing attacks or to deface the website. A simple example would be: http://localhost/opendocman-1.3.4/search.php/">Security Alert: Please upgrade to the latest version here!'; category.php:
rejects.php: echo ''; rejects.php: echo ''; search.php: