Huawei LAYA-AL00EP FIRMWARE

CPE Details

Huawei LAYA-AL00EP FIRMWARE
-
2021-10-22
14h56 +00:00
2021-10-22
18h08 +00:00
Alerte pour un CPE
Restez informé de toutes modifications pour un CPE spécifique.
Gestion des notifications

CPE Name: cpe:2.3:o:huawei:laya-al00ep_firmware:-:*:*:*:*:*:*:*

Informations

Vendor

huawei

Product

laya-al00ep_firmware

Version

-

Related CVE

Open and find in CVE List

CVE ID Publié Description Score Gravité
CVE-2020-9247 2020-12-07 11h49 +00:00 There is a buffer overflow vulnerability in several Huawei products. The system does not sufficiently validate certain configuration parameter which is passed from user that would cause buffer overflow. The attacker should trick the user into installing and running a malicious application with a high privilege, successful exploit may cause code execution. Affected product include Huawei HONOR 20 PRO, Mate 20, Mate 20 Pro, Mate 20 X, P30, P30 Pro, Hima-L29C, Laya-AL00EP, Princeton-AL10B, Tony-AL00B, Yale-L61A, Yale-TL00B and YaleP-AL10B.
7.8
Haute
CVE-2020-9109 2020-10-12 11h39 +00:00 There is an information disclosure vulnerability in several smartphones. The device does not sufficiently validate the identity of smart wearable device in certain specific scenario, the attacker need to gain certain information in the victim's smartphone to launch the attack, and successful exploit could cause information disclosure.Affected product versions include:HUAWEI Mate 20 versions earlier than 10.1.0.160(C00E160R3P8),versions earlier than 10.1.0.160(C01E160R2P8);HUAWEI Mate 20 X versions earlier than 10.1.0.160(C00E160R2P8),versions earlier than 10.1.0.160(C01E160R2P8);HUAWEI P30 Pro versions earlier than 10.1.0.160(C00E160R2P8);Laya-AL00EP versions earlier than 10.1.0.160(C786E160R3P8);Tony-AL00B versions earlier than 10.1.0.160(C00E160R2P11);Tony-TL00B versions earlier than 10.1.0.160(C01E160R2P11).
4.6
Moyen
CVE-2019-9506 2019-08-14 16h27 +00:00 The Bluetooth BR/EDR specification up to and including version 5.1 permits sufficiently low encryption key length and does not prevent an attacker from influencing the key length negotiation. This allows practical brute-force attacks (aka "KNOB") that can decrypt traffic and inject arbitrary ciphertext without the victim noticing.
8.1
Haute