Ryan

5 exploits Active since Oct 2025
CVE-2026-33329 WRITEUP HIGH WRITEUP
FileRise: Path Traversal in `resumableIdentifier` Leading to Arbitrary File Write, Recursive Directory Deletion, and Limited Existence Oracle
FileRise is a self-hosted web file manager / WebDAV server. From version 1.0.1 to before version 3.10.0, the resumableIdentifier parameter in the Resumable.js chunked upload handler (UploadModel::handleUpload()) is concatenated directly into filesystem paths without any sanitization. An authenticated user with upload permission can exploit this to write files to arbitrary directories on the server, delete arbitrary directories via the post-assembly cleanup, and probe file/directory existence. This issue has been patched in version 3.10.0.
CVSS 8.1
CVE-2026-33330 WRITEUP HIGH WRITEUP
FileRise ONLYOFFICE integration allows read-only users to overwrite files via forged save callback
FileRise is a self-hosted web file manager / WebDAV server. Prior to version 3.10.0, a broken access control issue in FileRise's ONLYOFFICE integration allows an authenticated user with read-only access to obtain a signed save callbackUrl for a file and then directly forge the ONLYOFFICE save callback to overwrite that file with attacker-controlled content. This issue has been patched in version 3.10.0.
CVSS 7.1
CVE-2025-62509 WRITEUP HIGH WRITEUP
Filerise < 1.4.0 - Improper Access Control
FileRise is a self-hosted web-based file manager with multi-file upload, editing, and batch operations. Prior to version 1.4.0, a business logic flaw in FileRise’s file/folder handling allows low-privilege users to perform unauthorized operations (view/delete/modify) on files created by other users. The root cause was inferring ownership/visibility from folder names (e.g., a folder named after a username) and missing server-side authorization/ownership checks across file operation endpoints. This amounted to an IDOR pattern: an attacker could operate on resources identified only by predictable names. This issue has been patched in version 1.4.0 and further hardened in version 1.5.0. A workaround for this issue involves restricting non-admin users to read-only or disable delete/rename APIs server-side, avoid creating top-level folders named after other usernames, and adding server-side checks that verify ownership before delete/rename/move.
CVSS 8.1
CVE-2025-62510 WRITEUP HIGH WRITEUP
Filerise < 1.5.0 - Improper Access Control
FileRise is a self-hosted web-based file manager with multi-file upload, editing, and batch operations. In version 1.4.0, a regression allowed folder visibility/ownership to be inferred from folder names. Low-privilege users could see or interact with folders matching their username and, in some cases, other users’ content. This issue has been patched in version 1.5.0, where it introduces explicit per-folder ACLs (owners/read/write/share/read_own) and strict server-side checks across list, read, write, share, rename, copy/move, zip, and WebDAV paths.
CVSS 8.1
CVE-2025-66403 WRITEUP MEDIUM WRITEUP
FileRise <2.2.3 - XSS
FileRise is a self-hosted web-based file manager with multi-file upload, editing, and batch operations. Prior to 2.2.3, a stored cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability exists in the Filerise application due to improper handling of uploaded SVG files. The application accepts user-supplied SVG uploads without sanitizing or restricting embedded script content. When a malicious SVG containing inline JavaScript or event-based payloads is uploaded, it is later rendered directly in the browser whenever viewed within the application. Because SVGs are XML-based and allow scripting, they execute in the origin context of the application, enabling full stored XSS. This vulnerability is fixed in 2.2.3.
CVSS 4.6