CVE-2025-50012
BaseFortify
Publication date: 2025-06-20
Last updated on: 2026-04-23
Assigner: Patchstack
Description
Description
CVSS Scores
EPSS Scores
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Meta Information
Affected Vendors & Products
Helpful Resources
Exploitability
| CWE ID | Description |
|---|---|
| CWE-79 | The product does not neutralize or incorrectly neutralizes user-controllable input before it is placed in output that is used as a web page that is served to other users. |
Attack-Flow Graph
AI Powered Q&A
Can you explain this vulnerability to me?
This vulnerability is a Stored Cross-site Scripting (XSS) issue in the WordPress Inventory Presser plugin (versions up to 15.0.0). It allows a malicious administrator to inject malicious scripts, such as redirects or advertisements, into the website. These scripts execute when visitors access the site, potentially compromising the site's integrity and user experience. [1]
How can this vulnerability impact me? :
If exploited, this vulnerability can allow an attacker with administrator privileges to inject malicious scripts into your website. These scripts can execute in the browsers of visitors, leading to unwanted redirects, display of malicious advertisements, or other harmful HTML payloads. This can damage your website's reputation, compromise user trust, and potentially lead to further security issues. [1]
How can this vulnerability be detected on my network or system? Can you suggest some commands?
Detection of this vulnerability involves monitoring for malicious script injections by users with administrator privileges in the Inventory Presser plugin. Since the vulnerability allows stored Cross-Site Scripting (XSS), you can look for suspicious HTML or JavaScript payloads in the plugin's input fields or database entries. However, no specific detection commands are provided. Patchstack recommends vigilance against automated attacks and professional incident response if compromise is suspected. [1]
What immediate steps should I take to mitigate this vulnerability?
Immediate mitigation steps include applying virtual patching (vPatching) offered by Patchstack, which automatically protects websites from this vulnerability without requiring an official patch. Additionally, maintain vigilance against automated attacks targeting this vulnerability and consider professional incident response services if your website is compromised. Since no official fix or patched version is currently available, virtual patching is the recommended approach. [1]