| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Windows NT 4.0 beta allows users to read and delete shares. |
| Teardrop IP denial of service. |
| Denial of service in RAS/PPTP on NT systems. |
| Windows 95/NT out of band (OOB) data denial of service through NETBIOS port, aka WinNuke. |
| Windows NT crashes or locks up when a Samba client executes a "cd .." command on a file share. |
| Denial of service in RPCSS.EXE program (RPC Locator) in Windows NT. |
| Windows 98 and other operating systems allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via crafted "oshare" packets, possibly involving invalid fragmentation offsets. |
| In some cases, Service Pack 4 for Windows NT 4.0 can allow access to network shares using a blank password, through a problem with a null NT hash value. |
| The installer for BackOffice Server includes account names and passwords in a setup file (reboot.ini) which is not deleted. |
| Local users in Windows NT can obtain administrator privileges by changing the KnownDLLs list to reference malicious programs. |
| The screen saver in Windows NT does not verify that its security context has been changed properly, allowing attackers to run programs with elevated privileges. |
| The Forms 2.0 ActiveX control (included with Visual Basic for Applications 5.0) can be used to read text from a user's clipboard when the user accesses documents with ActiveX content. |
| A legacy credential caching mechanism used in Windows 95 and Windows 98 systems allows attackers to read plaintext network passwords. |
| The cryptographic challenge of SMB authentication in Windows 95 and Windows 98 can be reused, allowing an attacker to replay the response and impersonate a user. |
| Remote attackers can perform a denial of service in Windows machines using malicious ARP packets, forcing a message box display for each packet or filling up log files. |
| A Windows NT 4.0 user can gain administrative rights by forcing NtOpenProcessToken to succeed regardless of the user's permissions, aka GetAdmin. |
| Denial of service in Windows NT messenger service through a long username. |
| Windows NT 4.0 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via a malformed SMB logon request in which the actual data size does not match the specified size. |
| Windows NT TCP/IP processes fragmented IP packets improperly, causing a denial of service. |
| Access violation in LSASS.EXE (LSA/LSARPC) program in Windows NT allows a denial of service. |