Mozilla Foundation Security Advisory 2022-34
Security Vulnerabilities fixed in Firefox ESR 102.2
- Announced
- August 23, 2022
- Impact
- high
- Products
- Firefox ESR
- Fixed in
-
- Firefox ESR 102.2
#CVE-2022-38472: Address bar spoofing via XSLT error handling
- Reporter
- Armin Ebert
- Impact
- high
Description
An attacker could have abused XSLT error handling to associate attacker-controlled content with another origin which was displayed in the address bar. This could have been used to fool the user into submitting data intended for the spoofed origin.
References
#CVE-2022-38473: Cross-origin XSLT Documents would have inherited the parent's permissions
- Reporter
- Armin Ebert
- Impact
- high
Description
A cross-origin iframe referencing an XSLT document would inherit the parent domain's permissions (such as microphone or camera access).
References
#CVE-2022-38476: Data race and potential use-after-free in PK11_ChangePW
- Reporter
- Marian Laza
- Impact
- low
Description
A data race could occur in the PK11_ChangePW
function, potentially leading to a use-after-free vulnerability. In Firefox, this lock protected the data when a user changed their master password.
References
#CVE-2022-38477: Memory safety bugs fixed in Firefox 104 and Firefox ESR 102.2
- Reporter
- Mozilla developers and community
- Impact
- high
Description
Mozilla developer Nika Layzell and the Mozilla Fuzzing Team reported memory safety bugs present in Firefox 103 and Firefox ESR 102.1. Some of these bugs showed evidence of memory corruption and we presume that with enough effort some of these could have been exploited to run arbitrary code.
References
#CVE-2022-38478: Memory safety bugs fixed in Firefox 104, Firefox ESR 102.2, and Firefox ESR 91.13
- Reporter
- Mozilla developers and community
- Impact
- high
Description
Members the Mozilla Fuzzing Team reported memory safety bugs present in Firefox 103, Firefox ESR 102.1, and Firefox ESR 91.12. Some of these bugs showed evidence of memory corruption and we presume that with enough effort some of these could have been exploited to run arbitrary code.