We use these services and cookies to improve your user experience. You may opt out if you wish, however, this may limit some features on this site.

Please see our statement on Data Privacy.

Crisp.chat (Helpdesk and Chat)

Ok

THREATINT
PUBLISHED

CVE-2022-3033



Assignermozilla
Reserved2022-08-29
Published2022-12-22
Updated2024-08-03

Description

If a Thunderbird user replied to a crafted HTML email containing a <code>meta</code> tag, with the <code>meta</code> tag having the <code>http-equiv="refresh"</code> attribute, and the content attribute specifying an URL, then Thunderbird started a network request to that URL, regardless of the configuration to block remote content. In combination with certain other HTML elements and attributes in the email, it was possible to execute JavaScript code included in the message in the context of the message compose document. The JavaScript code was able to perform actions including, but probably not limited to, read and modify the contents of the message compose document, including the quoted original message, which could potentially contain the decrypted plaintext of encrypted data in the crafted email. The contents could then be transmitted to the network, either to the URL specified in the META refresh tag, or to a different URL, as the JavaScript code could modify the URL specified in the document. This bug doesn't affect users who have changed the default Message Body display setting to 'simple html' or 'plain text'. This vulnerability affects Thunderbird < 102.2.1 and Thunderbird < 91.13.1.

Product status

Any version before 102.2.1
affected

Any version before 91.13.1
affected

References

https://www.mozilla.org/security/advisories/mfsa2022-38/

https://www.mozilla.org/security/advisories/mfsa2022-39/

https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1784838

cve.org CVE-2022-3033

nvd.nist.gov CVE-2022-3033

Download JSON

Share this page
https://cve.threatint.com/CVE/CVE-2022-3033

Support options

Helpdesk Chat, Email, Knowledgebase
Telegram Chat
Subscribe to our newsletter to learn more about our work.