← Back

Johnson Tl00d Firmware

johnson-tl00d_firmware

Vendor: Huawei • 3 CVEs

CVEs (3)

CVE
VENDORS
PRODUCTS
UPDATED
PUBLISHED
CVSS
1Huawei
50Alp Al00b Firmware
Alp Tl00b FirmwareBla Al00b Firmware+47 more
Nov 21, 2024
Dec 14, 2019
N/A· v4
5.3 MEDIUM· v3
5.0 MEDIUM· v2
Some Huawei smart phones have a null pointer dereference vulnerability. An attacker crafts specific packets and sends to the affected product to exploit this vulnerability. Successful exploitation may cause the affected...Show more
Some Huawei smart phones have a null pointer dereference vulnerability. An attacker crafts specific packets and sends to the affected product to exploit this vulnerability. Successful exploitation may cause the affected phone to be abnormal.Show less
5Canonical
DebianGoogle+2 more
77A220 Firmware
A320 FirmwareA800 Firmware+74 more
Oct 24, 2025
Oct 11, 2019
N/A· v4
7.8 HIGH· v3
4.6 MEDIUM· v2
A use-after-free in binder.c allows an elevation of privilege from an application to the Linux Kernel. No user interaction is required to exploit this vulnerability, however exploitation does require either the installat...Show more
A use-after-free in binder.c allows an elevation of privilege from an application to the Linux Kernel. No user interaction is required to exploit this vulnerability, however exploitation does require either the installation of a malicious local application or a separate vulnerability in a network facing application.Product: AndroidAndroid ID: A-141720095Show less
7Apple
CanonicalDebian+4 more
147Alp Al00b Firmware
AndroidAres Al00b Firmware+144 more
Nov 21, 2024
Aug 14, 2019
N/A· v4
8.1 HIGH· v3
4.8 MEDIUM· v2
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-...Show more
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.Show less