Vulnerabilities (CVE)

Filtered by vendor Verbatim Subscribe
Filtered by product Store \'n\' Go Secure Portable Hdd
Total 3 CVE
CVE Vendors Products Updated CVSS v2 CVSS v3
CVE-2022-28384 1 Verbatim 4 Keypad Secure Usb 3.2 Gen 1, Keypad Secure Usb 3.2 Gen 1 Firmware, Store \'n\' Go Secure Portable Hdd and 1 more 2023-12-10 2.1 LOW 5.5 MEDIUM
An issue was discovered in certain Verbatim drives through 2022-03-31. Due to an insecure design, they allow an offline brute-force attack for determining the correct passcode, and thus gaining unauthorized access to the stored encrypted data. This affects Keypad Secure USB 3.2 Gen 1 Drive Part Number #49428 and Store 'n' Go Secure Portable HDD GD25LK01-3637-C VER4.0.
CVE-2022-28383 1 Verbatim 8 Executive Fingerprint Secure Ssd, Executive Fingerprint Secure Ssd Firmware, Fingerprint Secure Portable Hard Drive and 5 more 2023-12-10 4.6 MEDIUM 6.8 MEDIUM
An issue was discovered in certain Verbatim drives through 2022-03-31. Due to insufficient firmware validation, an attacker can store malicious firmware code for the USB-to-SATA bridge controller on the USB drive (e.g., by leveraging physical access during the supply chain). This code is then executed. This affects Keypad Secure USB 3.2 Gen 1 Drive Part Number #49428, Store 'n' Go Secure Portable HDD GD25LK01-3637-C VER4.0, Executive Fingerprint Secure SSD GDMSFE01-INI3637-C VER1.1, and Fingerprint Secure Portable Hard Drive Part Number #53650.
CVE-2022-28382 1 Verbatim 8 Executive Fingerprint Secure Ssd, Executive Fingerprint Secure Ssd Firmware, Fingerprint Secure Portable Hard Drive and 5 more 2023-12-10 5.0 MEDIUM 7.5 HIGH
An issue was discovered in certain Verbatim drives through 2022-03-31. Due to the use of an insecure encryption AES mode (Electronic Codebook, aka ECB), an attacker may be able to extract information even from encrypted data, for example by observing repeating byte patterns. The firmware of the USB-to-SATA bridge controller INIC-3637EN uses AES-256 with the ECB mode. This operation mode of block ciphers (e.g., AES) always encrypts identical plaintext data, in this case blocks of 16 bytes, to identical ciphertext data. For some data, for instance bitmap images, the lack of the cryptographic property called diffusion, within ECB, can leak sensitive information even in encrypted data. Thus, the use of the ECB operation mode can put the confidentiality of specific information at risk, even in an encrypted form. This affects Keypad Secure USB 3.2 Gen 1 Drive Part Number #49428, Store 'n' Go Secure Portable HDD GD25LK01-3637-C VER4.0, Executive Fingerprint Secure SSD GDMSFE01-INI3637-C VER1.1, and Fingerprint Secure Portable Hard Drive Part Number #53650.