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| purl | pkg:pypi/notebook@0.0.0 |
| Vulnerability | Summary | Fixed by |
|---|---|---|
|
VCID-4vqp-xtgq-p3ex
Aliases: CVE-2018-8768 GHSA-6cwv-x26c-w2q4 PYSEC-2018-57 |
In Jupyter Notebook before 5.4.1, a maliciously forged notebook file can bypass sanitization to execute JavaScript in the notebook context. Specifically, invalid HTML is 'fixed' by jQuery after sanitization, making it dangerous. |
Affected by 9 other vulnerabilities. |
|
VCID-7ccm-mj5n-dkct
Aliases: CVE-2019-9644 GHSA-hhx8-cr55-qcxx PYSEC-2019-159 |
An XSSI (cross-site inclusion) vulnerability in Jupyter Notebook before 5.7.6 allows inclusion of resources on malicious pages when visited by users who are authenticated with a Jupyter server. Access to the content of resources has been demonstrated with Internet Explorer through capturing of error messages, though not reproduced with other browsers. This occurs because Internet Explorer's error messages can include the content of any invalid JavaScript that was encountered. |
Affected by 6 other vulnerabilities. |
|
VCID-a9nq-eg1d-2fen
Aliases: BIT-jupyter-base-notebook-2022-29238 BIT-jupyter-notebook-2022-29238 CVE-2022-29238 GHSA-v7vq-3x77-87vg PYSEC-2022-212 |
Jupyter Notebook is a web-based notebook environment for interactive computing. Prior to version 6.4.12, authenticated requests to the notebook server with `ContentsManager.allow_hidden = False` only prevented listing the contents of hidden directories, not accessing individual hidden files or files in hidden directories (i.e. hidden files were 'hidden' but not 'inaccessible'). This could lead to notebook configurations allowing authenticated access to files that may reasonably be expected to be disallowed. Because fully authenticated requests are required, this is of relatively low impact. But if a server's root directory contains sensitive files whose only protection from the server is being hidden (e.g. `~/.ssh` while serving $HOME), then any authenticated requests could access files if their names are guessable. Such contexts also necessarily have full access to the server and therefore execution permissions, which also generally grants access to all the same files. So this does not generally result in any privilege escalation or increase in information access, only an additional, unintended means by which the files could be accessed. Version 6.4.12 contains a patch for this issue. There are currently no known workarounds. |
Affected by 0 other vulnerabilities. |
|
VCID-ep9f-n1q3-93fh
Aliases: CVE-2019-10856 GHSA-rcx2-m7jp-p9wj PYSEC-2019-158 |
In Jupyter Notebook before 5.7.8, an open redirect can occur via an empty netloc. This issue exists because of an incomplete fix for CVE-2019-10255. |
Affected by 4 other vulnerabilities. |
|
VCID-jzfv-v43y-4yev
Aliases: CVE-2018-19352 GHSA-3p4q-x8f3-p7vq PYSEC-2018-18 |
cross-site scripting |
Affected by 7 other vulnerabilities. |
|
VCID-mm9w-w5e5-pfhw
Aliases: CVE-2019-10255 GHSA-rv62-4pmj-xw6h |
URL Redirection to Untrusted Site (Open Redirect) An Open Redirect vulnerability for all browsers in Jupyter Notebook and some browsers (Chrome, Firefox) allows crafted links to the login page, which will redirect to a malicious site after successful login. Servers running on a `base_url` prefix are not affected. |
Affected by 4 other vulnerabilities. |
|
VCID-nrwx-kw8f-83d2
Aliases: GMS-2015-22 |
XSS vulnerability If you create a new folder in the iPython file browser and set Javascript code as its name the code injected will be executed. So, if I create a folder called "><img src=x onerror=alert(document.cookie)> and then I access to it, the cookies will be prompted. |
Affected by 10 other vulnerabilities. |
|
VCID-p6d2-1hgc-1bgj
Aliases: BIT-jupyter-base-notebook-2022-24758 BIT-jupyter-notebook-2022-24758 CVE-2022-24758 GHSA-m87f-39q9-6f55 PYSEC-2022-180 |
The Jupyter notebook is a web-based notebook environment for interactive computing. Prior to version 6.4.9, unauthorized actors can access sensitive information from server logs. Anytime a 5xx error is triggered, the auth cookie and other header values are recorded in Jupyter server logs by default. Considering these logs do not require root access, an attacker can monitor these logs, steal sensitive auth/cookie information, and gain access to the Jupyter server. Jupyter notebook version 6.4.x contains a patch for this issue. There are currently no known workarounds. |
Affected by 1 other vulnerability. |
|
VCID-ps5x-4m98-j3bf
Aliases: CVE-2018-21030 GHSA-jqwc-jm56-wcwj PYSEC-2019-157 |
Jupyter Notebook before 5.5.0 does not use a CSP header to treat served files as belonging to a separate origin. Thus, for example, an XSS payload can be placed in an SVG document. |
Affected by 9 other vulnerabilities. Affected by 8 other vulnerabilities. |
|
VCID-sjpw-qzhj-m7dp
Aliases: CVE-2018-19351 GHSA-49qr-xh3w-h436 PYSEC-2018-17 |
cross-site scripting |
Affected by 8 other vulnerabilities. |
|
VCID-xdj2-ghy5-ybdw
Aliases: BIT-jupyter-base-notebook-2020-26215 BIT-jupyter-notebook-2020-26215 CVE-2020-26215 GHSA-c7vm-f5p4-8fqh PYSEC-2020-215 |
Jupyter Notebook before version 6.1.5 has an Open redirect vulnerability. A maliciously crafted link to a notebook server could redirect the browser to a different website. All notebook servers are technically affected, however, these maliciously crafted links can only be reasonably made for known notebook server hosts. A link to your notebook server may appear safe, but ultimately redirect to a spoofed server on the public internet. The issue is patched in version 6.1.5. |
Affected by 2 other vulnerabilities. |
| Vulnerability | Summary | Aliases |
|---|---|---|
| This package is not known to fix vulnerabilities. | ||