| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| A Windows NT domain user or administrator account has a guessable password. |
| A Windows NT domain user or administrator account has a default, null, blank, or missing password. |
| IP forwarding is enabled on a machine which is not a router or firewall. |
| A NETBIOS/SMB share password is the default, null, or missing. |
| The Windows NT guest account is enabled. |
| Windows NT automatically logs in an administrator upon rebooting. |
| A system-critical Windows NT file or directory has inappropriate permissions. |
| The registry in Windows NT can be accessed remotely by users who are not administrators. |
| .reg files are associated with the Windows NT registry editor (regedit), making the registry susceptible to Trojan Horse attacks. |
| A Windows NT system's user audit policy does not log an event success or failure, e.g. for Logon and Logoff, File and Object Access, Use of User Rights, User and Group Management, Security Policy Changes, Restart, Shutdown, and System, and Process Tracking. |
| A Windows NT system's file audit policy does not log an event success or failure for security-critical files or directories. |
| A Windows NT system's file audit policy does not log an event success or failure for non-critical files or directories. |
| A Windows NT system's registry audit policy does not log an event success or failure for security-critical registry keys. |
| A Windows NT system's registry audit policy does not log an event success or failure for non-critical registry keys. |
| The HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT key in a Windows NT system has inappropriate, system-critical permissions. |
| A Windows NT account policy has inappropriate, security-critical settings for lockout, e.g. lockout duration, lockout after bad logon attempts, etc. |
| A Windows NT administrator account has the default name of Administrator. |
| A system does not present an appropriate legal message or warning to a user who is accessing it. |
| A version of finger is running that exposes valid user information to any entity on the network. |
| Buffer overflow in Microsoft Phone Dialer (dialer.exe), via a malformed dialer entry in the dialer.ini file. |