CVE-2026-48136
Received Received - Intake
BaseFortify

Publication date: 2026-05-26

Last updated on: 2026-05-26

Assigner: Check Point Software Technologies Ltd.

Description
When Compliance is enabled on Check Point Multi-Domain Management, an authenticated administrator with read-write access to one Management Domain (CMA) can modify stored metadata associated with Compliance Best Practices in another Management Domain, where the administrator has no access permissions, bypassing Role-Based Access Control (RBAC).
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Meta Information
Published
2026-05-26
Last Modified
2026-05-26
Generated
2026-05-26
AI Q&A
2026-05-26
EPSS Evaluated
N/A
NVD
EUVD
Affected Vendors & Products
Showing 1 associated CPE
Vendor Product Version / Range
checkpoint multi-domain_management *
Helpful Resources
Exploitability
CWE
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KEV
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CWE ID Description
CWE-89 The product constructs all or part of an SQL command using externally-influenced input from an upstream component, but it does not neutralize or incorrectly neutralizes special elements that could modify the intended SQL command when it is sent to a downstream component. Without sufficient removal or quoting of SQL syntax in user-controllable inputs, the generated SQL query can cause those inputs to be interpreted as SQL instead of ordinary user data.
Attack-Flow Graph
AI Powered Q&A
How does this vulnerability affect compliance with common standards and regulations (like GDPR, HIPAA)?:

This vulnerability allows an authenticated administrator with read-write access to one Management Domain to modify stored metadata related to Compliance Best Practices in another Management Domain without having access permissions, effectively bypassing Role-Based Access Control (RBAC).

Such unauthorized modification of compliance metadata can undermine the integrity and reliability of compliance reporting and controls, potentially leading to non-compliance with standards and regulations like GDPR and HIPAA that require strict access controls and accurate audit trails.


Can you explain this vulnerability to me?

This vulnerability occurs in Check Point Multi-Domain Management when Compliance is enabled. An authenticated administrator who has read-write access to one Management Domain (CMA) can modify stored metadata related to Compliance Best Practices in another Management Domain where they do not have access permissions. This effectively bypasses the Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) mechanisms.


How can this vulnerability impact me? :

The vulnerability allows an administrator with access to one domain to alter compliance metadata in other domains without proper authorization. This can lead to unauthorized changes in compliance settings, potentially undermining security policies and controls across multiple management domains. It may result in inaccurate compliance reporting and weaken the overall security posture.


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