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CVE-2017-20204

DBLTek GoIP Telnet Admin Interface Undocumented Backdoor

CVSS 9.3 CRITICALEPSS 0.8%CWE-1242
In short

DBLTek GoIP devices have a hidden backdoor in their admin interface that lets attackers log in remotely without a password, giving them complete control of the device and any systems it manages.

Technical detail

The Telnet admin interface contains an undocumented backdoor user authenticated via a flawed challenge-response scheme where the response can be computed directly from the challenge, enabling unauthenticated remote attackers to obtain root shell access. This affects GoIP models 1, 4, 8, 16, and 32, resulting in persistent remote code execution and full device compromise. Partial complexity was introduced in December 2016 firmware updates, but complete mitigation status remains unclear.

Summary generated and translated by AI from the official description.
DBLTek GoIP devices (models GoIP 1, 4, 8, 16, and 32) contain an undocumented vendor backdoor in the Telnet administrative interface that allows remote authentication as an undocumented user via a proprietary challenge–response scheme which is fundamentally flawed. Because the challenge response can be computed from the challenge itself, a remote attacker can authenticate without knowledge of a secret and obtain a root shell on the device. This can lead to persistent remote code execution, full device compromise, and arbitrary control of the device and any managed services. The firmware used within these devices was updated in December 2016 to make this vulnerability more complex to exploit. However, it is unknown if DBLTek has taken steps to fully mitigate.
CVSS:4.0/AV:N/AC:L/AT:N/PR:N/UI:N/VC:H/VI:H/VA:H/SC:N/SI:N/SA:N

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