Search Results (27 CVEs found)

CVE Vendors Products Updated CVSS v3.1
CVE-2001-1305 1 Mirabilis 1 Icq 2026-04-16 N/A
ICQ 2001a Alpha and earlier allows remote attackers to automatically add arbitrary UINs to an ICQ user's contact list via a URL to a web page with a Content-Type of application/x-icq, which is processed by Internet Explorer.
CVE-2002-1773 1 Mirabilis 1 Icq For Macos X 2026-04-16 N/A
Buffer overflow in ICQ 2.6x for MacOS X 10.0 through 10.1.2 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service and possibly execute arbitrary code via a long request.
CVE-2006-2303 1 Mirabilis 1 Icq 2026-04-16 N/A
Cross-Application Scripting (XAS) vulnerability in ICQ Client 5.04 build 2321 and earlier allows remote attackers to inject arbitrary web script from one application into another via a banner, which is processed in the My Computer zone using the Internet Explorer COM object.
CVE-2003-0236 1 Mirabilis 1 Icq 2026-04-16 N/A
Integer signedness errors in the POP3 client for Mirabilis ICQ Pro 2003a allow remote attackers to execute arbitrary code via the (1) Subject or (2) Date headers.
CVE-2006-0765 1 Mirabilis 2 Icq, Icq Lite 2026-04-16 N/A
GUI display truncation vulnerability in ICQ Inc. (formerly Mirabilis) ICQ 2003a, 2003b, Lite 4.0, Lite 4.1, and possibly other Windows versions allows user-assisted remote attackers to hide malicious file extensions, bypass Windows security warnings via a filename that is all uppercase and of a specific length, which truncates the malicious extension from the display and could trick a user into executing arbitrary programs.
CVE-2002-0028 1 Mirabilis 1 Icq 2026-04-16 N/A
Buffer overflow in ICQ before 2001B Beta v5.18 Build #3659 allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code via a Voice Video & Games request.
CVE-2006-0766 1 Mirabilis 2 Icq, Icq Lite 2026-04-16 N/A
ICQ Inc. (formerly Mirabilis) ICQ 2003a, 2003b, Lite 4.0, Lite 4.1, and possibly other Windows versions allows user-assisted remote attackers to hide malicious file extensions and bypass Windows security warnings via a filename that ends in an assumed-safe extension such as JPG, and possibly containing other modified properties such as company name, icon, and description, which could trick a user into executing arbitrary programs.