A vulnerability in several extensions for the All-in-One WP Migration plugin potentially exposes WordPress websites to attacks leading to sensitive information disclosure.
With more than five million installations and maintained by ServMask, All-in-One WP Migration is a highly popular plugin for moving websites that also provides several premium extensions for migrating to third-party platforms.
On Wednesday, WordPress security firm Patchstack shared details on a vulnerability impacting All-in-One WP Migration’s Box, Google Drive, OneDrive, and Dropbox extensions that could allow attackers to access sensitive information.
Tracked as CVE-2023-40004 and described as an unauthenticated access token manipulation issue, the bug could allow an unauthenticated attacker to tamper with the access token configuration of the affected extension.
“This access token manipulation could result in a potential sensitive information disclosure of migration to the attacker’s controlled third-party account or restore a malicious backup,” Patchstack says.
The flaw was identified in the init function of the affected extensions, which is “hooked to the WordPress’s admin_init hook”, which in turn can be triggered by an attacker, without authentication.
“Since there is no permission and nonce validation on the init function, an unauthenticated user is able to modify or delete the access token used on each of the affected extensions,” Patchstack explains.
On July 18, the WordPress security firm reported the vulnerability to ServMask, which patched the bug in all impacted extensions by “adding permission and nonce validation on the init function”.
Users are advised to update to All-in-One WP Migration’s Box extension version 1.54, Google Drive extension version 2.80, OneDrive extension version 1.67, and Dropbox extension version 3.76, which were released at the end of July.
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