A vulnerability allows a phreaking attack on HCL legacy IVR systems that do not use VoIP. These IVR systems rely on various frequencies of audio signals; based on the frequency, certain commands and functions are processed. Since these frequencies are accepted within a phone call, an attacker can record these frequencies and use them for service activations. This is a request-forgery issue when the required series of DTMF signals for a service activation is predictable (e.g., the IVR system does not speak a nonce to the caller). In this case, the IVR system accepts an activation request from a less-secure channel (any loudspeaker in the caller's physical environment) without verifying that the request was intended (it matches a nonce sent over a more-secure channel to the caller's earpiece).
References
Link | Resource |
---|---|
http://virgil-cj.blogspot.com/2018/05/0day-legacy-ivr-lets-phreak.html | Third Party Advisory |
https://datarift.blogspot.com/2018/05/CVE-2018-11518-abusing-ivr-systems.html | Third Party Advisory |
https://twitter.com/mishradhiraj_/status/1001664204485652482 | Third Party Advisory |
https://twitter.com/mishradhiraj_/status/1001664440759091207 | Third Party Advisory |
Configurations
Configuration 1 (hide)
AND |
|
History
No history.
Information
Published : 2018-05-30 20:29
Updated : 2024-02-04 19:46
NVD link : CVE-2018-11518
Mitre link : CVE-2018-11518
CVE.ORG link : CVE-2018-11518
JSON object : View
Products Affected
hcltech
- legacy_ivr_firmware
- legacy_ivr
CWE
CWE-20
Improper Input Validation