Mozilla Foundation Security Advisory 2024-47
Security Vulnerabilities fixed in Firefox ESR 128.3
- Announced
- October 1, 2024
- Impact
- high
- Products
- Firefox ESR
- Fixed in
-
- Firefox ESR 128.3
#CVE-2024-9392: Compromised content process can bypass site isolation
- Reporter
- Jan Drescher and David Klein from IAS, TU Braunschweig
- Impact
- high
Description
A compromised content process could have allowed for the arbitrary loading of cross-origin pages.
References
#CVE-2024-9393: Cross-origin access to PDF contents through multipart responses
- Reporter
- Masato Kinugawa
- Impact
- high
Description
An attacker could, via a specially crafted multipart response, execute arbitrary JavaScript under the resource://pdf.js
origin. This could allow them to access cross-origin PDF content. This access is limited to "same site" documents by the Site Isolation feature on desktop clients, but full cross-origin access is possible on Android versions.
References
#CVE-2024-9394: Cross-origin access to JSON contents through multipart responses
- Reporter
- Masato Kinugawa
- Impact
- high
Description
An attacker could, via a specially crafted multipart response, execute arbitrary JavaScript under the resource://devtools
origin. This could allow them to access cross-origin JSON content. This access is limited to "same site" documents by the Site Isolation feature on desktop clients, but full cross-origin access is possible on Android versions.
References
#CVE-2024-8900: Clipboard write permission bypass
- Reporter
- Om Apip
- Impact
- moderate
Description
An attacker could write data to the user's clipboard, bypassing the user prompt, during a certain sequence of navigational events.
References
#CVE-2024-9396: Potential memory corruption may occur when cloning certain objects
- Reporter
- Nils Bars
- Impact
- moderate
Description
It is currently unknown if this issue is exploitable but a condition may arise where the structured clone of certain objects could lead to memory corruption.
References
#CVE-2024-9397: Potential directory upload bypass via clickjacking
- Reporter
- Shaheen Fazim
- Impact
- moderate
Description
A missing delay in directory upload UI could have made it possible for an attacker to trick a user into granting permission via clickjacking.
References
#CVE-2024-9398: External protocol handlers could be enumerated via popups
- Reporter
- Satoki Tsuji
- Impact
- low
Description
By checking the result of calls to window.open
with specifically set protocol handlers, an attacker could determine if the application which implements that protocol handler is installed.
References
#CVE-2024-9399: Specially crafted WebTransport requests could lead to denial of service
- Reporter
- Marten Richter
- Impact
- low
Description
A website configured to initiate a specially crafted WebTransport session could crash the Firefox process leading to a denial of service condition.
References
#CVE-2024-9400: Potential memory corruption during JIT compilation
- Reporter
- Gary Kwong
- Impact
- low
Description
A potential memory corruption vulnerability could be triggered if an attacker had the ability to trigger an OOM at a specific moment during JIT compilation.
References
#CVE-2024-9401: Memory safety bugs fixed in Firefox 131, Firefox ESR 115.16, Firefox ESR 128.3, Thunderbird 131, and Thunderbird 128.3
- Reporter
- Andrew Osmond, Sebastian Hengst, Andrew McCreight
- Impact
- high
Description
Memory safety bugs present in Firefox 130, Firefox ESR 115.15, Firefox ESR 128.2, and Thunderbird 128.2. 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-2024-9402: Memory safety bugs fixed in Firefox 131, Firefox ESR 128.3, Thunderbird 131, and Thunderbird 128.3
- Reporter
- Andrew Osmond, Andrew McCreight, Sebastian Hengst, Yury Delendik, the Mozilla Fuzzing Team
- Impact
- high
Description
Memory safety bugs present in Firefox 130, Firefox ESR 128.2, and Thunderbird 128.2. 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.