CVE-2013-4576

Severity

21%

Complexity

39%

Confidentiality

48%

GnuPG 1.x before 1.4.16 generates RSA keys using sequences of introductions with certain patterns that introduce a side channel, which allows physically proximate attackers to extract RSA keys via a chosen-ciphertext attack and acoustic cryptanalysis during decryption. NOTE: applications are not typically expected to protect themselves from acoustic side-channel attacks, since this is arguably the responsibility of the physical device. Accordingly, issues of this type would not normally receive a CVE identifier. However, for this issue, the developer has specified a security policy in which GnuPG should offer side-channel resistance, and developer-specified security-policy violations are within the scope of CVE.

GnuPG 1.x before 1.4.16 generates RSA keys using sequences of introductions with certain patterns that introduce a side channel, which allows physically proximate attackers to extract RSA keys via a chosen-ciphertext attack and acoustic cryptanalysis during decryption. NOTE: applications are not typically expected to protect themselves from acoustic side-channel attacks, since this is arguably the responsibility of the physical device. Accordingly, issues of this type would not normally receive a CVE identifier. However, for this issue, the developer has specified a security policy in which GnuPG should offer side-channel resistance, and developer-specified security-policy violations are within the scope of CVE.

CVSS 2.0 Base Score 2.1. CVSS Attack Vector: local. CVSS Attack Complexity: low. CVSS Vector: (AV:L/AC:L/Au:N/C:P/I:N/A:N).

Overview

Type

GnuPG

First reported 11 years ago

2013-12-20 21:55:00

Last updated 7 years ago

2017-08-29 01:33:00

Affected Software

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.0.0

1.0.0

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.0.1

1.0.1

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.0.2

1.0.2

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.0.3

1.0.3

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.0.4

1.0.4

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.0.4:-:win32

1.0.4

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.0.5

1.0.5

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.0.5:-:win32

1.0.5

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.0.6

1.0.6

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.0.7

1.0.7

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.2.0

1.2.0

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.2.1

1.2.1

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.2.1:windows

1.2.1

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.2.2

1.2.2

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.2.3

1.2.3

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.2.4

1.2.4

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.2.5

1.2.5

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.2.6

1.2.6

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.2.7

1.2.7

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.3.0

1.3.0

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.3.1

1.3.1

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.3.2

1.3.2

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.3.3

1.3.3

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.3.4

1.3.4

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.3.6

1.3.6

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.3.90

1.3.90

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.3.91

1.3.91

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.3.92

1.3.92

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.3.93

1.3.93

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.0

1.4.0

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.2

1.4.2

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.3

1.4.3

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.4

1.4.4

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.5

1.4.5

GnuPG (GNU Privacy Guard) 1.4.6

1.4.6

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.8

1.4.8

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.10

1.4.10

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.11

1.4.11

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.12

1.4.12

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.13

1.4.13

GnuPG (Privacy Guard) 1.4.14

1.4.14

Stay updated

ExploitPedia is constantly evolving. Sign up to receive a notification when we release additional functionality.

Get in touch

If you'd like to report a bug or have any suggestions for improvements then please do get in touch with us using this form. We will get back to you as soon as we can.