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Vulnerability Report: UW-imapd
This vulnerability report for UW-imapd contains a complete overview of all Secunia advisories affecting it. You can use this vulnerability report to ensure that you are aware of all vulnerabilities, both patched and unpatched, affecting this product allowing you to take the necessary precautions.

If you have information about a new or an existing vulnerability in UW-imapd then you are more than welcome to contact us.


Table of Contents

1. Product Summary Only

2. Secunia Advisory Statistics (All time)
2.1. Statistics for 2009
2.2. Statistics for 2008
2.3. Statistics for 2007
2.4. Statistics for 2006
2.5. Statistics for 2005
2.6. Statistics for 2004
2.7. Statistics for 2003

3. List of Secunia Advisories (All time)
3.1. List for 2009
3.2. List for 2008
3.3. List for 2007
3.4. List for 2006
3.5. List for 2005
3.6. List for 2004
3.7. List for 2003

4. Send Feedback
 
Vendor, Links, and Unpatched Vulnerabilities

Vendor University of Washington

Product Link View Here (Link to external site)

Affected By 5 Secunia advisories
5 Vulnerabilities

Monitor Product Receive alerts for this product

Unpatched 0% (0 of 5 Secunia advisories)

Most Critical Unpatched
There are no unpatched Secunia advisories affecting this product, when all vendor patches are applied..




5 Secunia Advisories in 2003-2009
Secunia has issued a total of 5 Secunia advisories in 2003-2009 for UW-imapd. Currently, 0% (0 out of 5) are marked as unpatched.

More information about the specific Secunia advisories affecting UW-imapd can be found below. Each Secunia advisory is enclosed by a box highlighted with a color representing its current patch status. You can read the complete Secunia advisories for thorough descriptions of the issues covered and for solution suggestions by clicking either the Secunia advisory title or the "Read More" links available for each Secunia advisory.



UW-imapd c-client Library Off-by-one Vulnerability
Vendor Patch. Secunia Advisory 1 of 2 in 2008. 2,117 views.
Release Date:
2008-12-22
Secunia Advisory ID:
SA33275
Solution Status:
Vendor Patch
Criticality:
Impact:
DoS
Where:
From remote
Short Description:
A vulnerability has been reported in UW-imapd, which can be exploited by malicious people to cause a DoS (Denial of Service). [Read More]


UW-imapd "tmail" and "dmail" Buffer Overflow Vulnerabilities
Vendor Patch. Secunia Advisory 2 of 2 in 2008. 3,011 views.
Release Date:
2008-11-03
Secunia Advisory ID:
SA32483
Solution Status:
Vendor Patch
Criticality:
Impact:
Privilege escalation
System access
Where:
From remote
Short Description:
Two vulnerabilities have been reported in UW-imapd, which can be exploited by malicious, local users to potentially gain escalated privileges, and by malicious people to potentially compromise a vulnerable system. [Read More]


UW-imapd Mailbox Name Parsing Buffer Overflow Vulnerability
Vendor Patch. Secunia Advisory 1 of 2 in 2005. 18,099 views.
Release Date:
2005-10-05
Secunia Advisory ID:
SA17062
Solution Status:
Vendor Patch
Criticality:
Impact:
DoS
System access
Where:
From remote
Short Description:
infamous41md has reported a vulnerability in UW-imapd, which can be exploited by malicious users to cause a DoS (Denial of Service) or compromise a vulnerable system. [Read More]


UW-imapd CRAM-MD5 Authentication Bypass Vulnerability
Vendor Patch. Secunia Advisory 2 of 2 in 2005. 10,204 views.
Release Date:
2005-01-28
Secunia Advisory ID:
SA14057
Solution Status:
Vendor Patch
Criticality:
Impact:
Security Bypass
Where:
From remote
Short Description:
A vulnerability has been reported in University of Washington IMAP server, which can be exploited by malicious people to bypass the user authentication. [Read More]


Multiple IMAP Clients System Access Vulnerabilities
Vendor Patch. Secunia Advisory 1 of 1 in 2003. 15,330 views.
Release Date:
2003-05-20
Secunia Advisory ID:
SA8810
Solution Status:
Vendor Patch
Criticality:
Impact:
DoS
System access
Where:
From remote
Short Description:
Two different vulnerabilities have been identified in multiple IMAP clients. On some systems it could be exploited to gain control of the client system. [Read More]