Security Risk Category
memory-corruption Security Risks
Published vulnerability pages connected to memory-corruption. One risk can appear in multiple categories while keeping one canonical page.
memory-corruption risks
Showing 6 of 6 published risks.
Samsung Escargot Stack Buffer Overflow Vulnerability
Stack-based buffer overflow vulnerability in Samsung Open Source Escargot allows Overflow Buffers. This issue affects Escargot: before b30b63fc63b403907d8137da1c65aaa4521fe74e.
Updated Jul 10, 2026
Samsung Escargot Out-of-Bounds Read and Write Vulnerability
Out-of-bounds read, Out-of-bounds write vulnerability in Samsung Open Source Escargot allows Overflow Buffers. This issue affects Escargot: before 779f6bedf58f334dec64b0a51ebb724b4708b84a.
Updated Jul 10, 2026
Samsung Escargot Heap Buffer Overflow Vulnerability
Heap-based buffer overflow vulnerability in Samsung Open Source Escargot allows Overflow Buffers. This issue affects Escargot: before ef525f337fafddecde77a3c426212a84bb20cb98.
Updated Jul 10, 2026
Samsung Escargot Out-of-Bounds Read and Assertion Vulnerability
Out-of-bounds read, Reachable assertion vulnerability in Samsung Open Source Escargot allows Overread Buffers, Input Data Manipulation. This issue affects Escargot: before 2dee22f5c7b8bf31cb7252d7731fae8c07f2842c.
Updated Jul 10, 2026
GStreamer rfbsrc Plugin Heap Buffer Overflow Vulnerability
A heap buffer overflow vulnerability was found in GStreamer's rfbsrc plugin. When a client connects to a malicious RFB/VNC server that advertises a 16bpp framebuffer and sends Hextile-encoded updates, the Hextile background fill path writes 32-bit pixel values into a buffer allocated for 16-bit pixels. This type mismatch causes an out-of-bounds heap write that can lead to denial of service (process crash) and potential memory corruption.
Updated Jul 10, 2026
GStreamer DTLS Plugin Stack Buffer Overflow Vulnerability
A stack buffer overflow vulnerability was found in GStreamer's DTLS plugin. During a DTLS handshake, the peer certificate Subject Distinguished Name is printed into a fixed-size 2048-byte stack buffer without bounds checking. A remote unauthenticated attacker can send a certificate with an oversized Subject DN that exceeds the buffer, causing a stack buffer overflow and process crash, resulting in denial of service.
Updated Jul 10, 2026
