Mozilla Foundation Security Advisory 2023-31
Security Vulnerabilities fixed in Firefox ESR 115.1
- Announced
- August 1, 2023
- Impact
- high
- Products
- Firefox ESR
- Fixed in
-
- Firefox ESR 115.1
#CVE-2023-4045: Offscreen Canvas could have bypassed cross-origin restrictions
- Reporter
- Max Vlasov
- Impact
- high
Description
Offscreen Canvas did not properly track cross-origin tainting, which could have been used to access image data from another site in violation of same-origin policy.
References
#CVE-2023-4046: Incorrect value used during WASM compilation
- Reporter
- Alexander Guryanov
- Impact
- high
Description
In some circumstances, a stale value could have been used for a global variable in WASM JIT analysis. This resulted in incorrect compilation and a potentially exploitable crash in the content process.
References
#CVE-2023-4047: Potential permissions request bypass via clickjacking
- Reporter
- Axel Chong (@Haxatron)
- Impact
- high
Description
A bug in popup notifications delay calculation could have made it possible for an attacker to trick a user into granting permissions.
References
#CVE-2023-4048: Crash in DOMParser due to out-of-memory conditions
- Reporter
- Irvan Kurniawan
- Impact
- high
Description
An out-of-bounds read could have led to an exploitable crash when parsing HTML with DOMParser in low memory situations.
References
#CVE-2023-4049: Fix potential race conditions when releasing platform objects
- Reporter
- Nika Layzell
- Impact
- high
Description
Race conditions in reference counting code were found through code inspection. These could have resulted in potentially exploitable use-after-free vulnerabilities.
References
#CVE-2023-4050: Stack buffer overflow in StorageManager
- Reporter
- Mark Brand
- Impact
- high
Description
In some cases, an untrusted input stream was copied to a stack buffer without checking its size. This resulted in a potentially exploitable crash which could have led to a sandbox escape.
References
#CVE-2023-4052: File deletion and privilege escalation through Firefox uninstaller
- Reporter
- ycdxsb
- Impact
- moderate
Description
The Firefox updater created a directory writable by non-privileged users. When uninstalling Firefox, any files in that directory would be recursively deleted with the permissions of the uninstalling user account. This could be combined with creation of a junction (a form of symbolic link) to allow arbitrary file deletion controlled by the non-privileged user.
This bug only affects Firefox on Windows. Other operating systems are unaffected.
References
#CVE-2023-4054: Lack of warning when opening appref-ms files
- Reporter
- P Umar Farooq
- Impact
- moderate
Description
When opening appref-ms files, Firefox did not warn the user that these files may contain malicious code.
This bug only affects Firefox on Windows. Other operating systems are unaffected.
References
#CVE-2023-4055: Cookie jar overflow caused unexpected cookie jar state
- Reporter
- Marco Squarcina
- Impact
- low
Description
When the number of cookies per domain was exceeded in document.cookie
, the actual cookie jar sent to the host was no longer consistent with expected cookie jar state. This could have caused requests to be sent with some cookies missing.
References
#CVE-2023-4056: Memory safety bugs fixed in Firefox 116, Firefox ESR 115.1, Firefox ESR 102.14, Thunderbird 115.1, and Thunderbird 102.14
- Reporter
- Dianna Smith, Ryan VanderMeulen, Timothy Nikkel, and the Mozilla Fuzzing Team
- Impact
- high
Description
Memory safety bugs present in Firefox 115, Firefox ESR 115.0, Firefox ESR 102.13, Thunderbird 115.0, and Thunderbird 102.13. 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-2023-4057: Memory safety bugs fixed in Firefox 116, Firefox ESR 115.1, and Thunderbird 115.1
- Reporter
- The Mozilla Fuzzing Team
- Impact
- high
Description
Memory safety bugs present in Firefox 115, Firefox ESR 115.0, and Thunderbird 115.0. 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.