Filtered by vendor Medtronic
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Total
24 CVE
CVE | Vendors | Products | Updated | CVSS v2 | CVSS v3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CVE-2018-10631 | 1 Medtronic | 4 N\'vision 8840, N\'vision 8840 Firmware, N\'vision 8870 and 1 more | 2019-10-09 | 4.6 MEDIUM | 6.8 MEDIUM |
Medtronic N'Vision Clinician Programmer 8840 N'Vision Clinician Programmer, all versions, and 8870 N'Vision removable Application Card, all versions. The 8840 Clinician Programmer executes the application program from the 8870 Application Card. An attacker with physical access to an 8870 Application Card and sufficient technical capability can modify the contents of this card, including the binary executables. If modified to bypass protection mechanisms, this malicious code will be run when the card is inserted into an 8840 Clinician Programmer. | |||||
CVE-2018-10626 | 1 Medtronic | 4 Mycarelink 24950 Patient Monitor, Mycarelink 24950 Patient Monitor Firmware, Mycarelink 24952 Patient Monitor and 1 more | 2019-10-09 | 3.8 LOW | 4.4 MEDIUM |
A vulnerability was discovered in all versions of Medtronic MyCareLink 24950 and 24952 Patient Monitor. The affected product's update service does not sufficiently verify the authenticity of the data uploaded. An attacker who obtains per-product credentials from the monitor and paired implantable cardiac device information can potentially upload invalid data to the Medtronic CareLink network. | |||||
CVE-2018-10622 | 1 Medtronic | 4 Mycarelink 24950 Patient Monitor, Mycarelink 24950 Patient Monitor Firmware, Mycarelink 24952 Patient Monitor and 1 more | 2019-10-09 | 1.9 LOW | 7.1 HIGH |
A vulnerability was discovered in all versions of Medtronic MyCareLink 24950 and 24952 Patient Monitor. The affected products use per-product credentials that are stored in a recoverable format. An attacker can use these credentials for network authentication and encryption of local data at rest. | |||||
CVE-2011-3386 | 1 Medtronic | 1 Paradigm Wireless Insulin Pump | 2017-08-28 | 4.0 MEDIUM | N/A |
Unspecified vulnerability in Medtronic Paradigm wireless insulin pump 512, 522, 712, and 722 allows remote attackers to modify the delivery of an insulin bolus dose and cause a denial of service (adverse human health effects) via unspecified vectors involving wireless communications and knowledge of the device's serial number, as demonstrated by Jerome Radcliffe at the Black Hat USA conference in August 2011. NOTE: the vendor has disputed the severity of this issue, saying "we believe the risk of deliberate, malicious, or unauthorized manipulation of medical devices is extremely low... we strongly believe it would be extremely difficult for a third-party to wirelessly tamper with your insulin pump... you would be able to detect tones on the insulin pump that weren't intentionally programmed and could intervene accordingly." |