Practical Security Guides For Your Team
Clear, non-alarmist guidance for real web vulnerabilities so your team can prioritize fixes confidently.
Outdated Vue.js Library Has a Known Security Flaw (CVE-2018-6341)
mediumYour website is using an old version of Vue.js (a JavaScript library that powers your web pages) that has a known security flaw. The flaw only affects sites that render pages on the server before sending them to visitors — a common setup for faster-loading or SEO-friendly sites. If your site works this way and passes user-supplied data into page attributes, the flaw could allow a malicious user to inject unwanted code into your pages. Upgrading Vue.js to a newer version fully resolves this.
Syntax Highlighter Library Can Be Used to Freeze or Crash Your App
mediumYour website uses an outdated version of a code-highlighting tool called Highlight.js (version 9.10.0). A known flaw in this version means that if your site lets users submit text that gets highlighted — like a code editor, comment box, or documentation tool — a malicious user could craft a special input that causes your server or browser to freeze up. This is only a concern if users can submit content that gets syntax-highlighted.
JavaScript Utility Library Can Be Crashed by Malicious Input (CVE-2026-27601)
highYour application uses a JavaScript helper library called Underscore.js that has a flaw in two of its functions. Under specific conditions, an attacker could send specially crafted deeply-nested data to your server, causing it to crash and become temporarily unavailable. Think of it like sending a letter with 4,500 envelopes nested inside each other — the library tries to open every one and runs out of room.
Outdated HTTP Library Can Be Used to Knock Your App Offline
highYour application uses an old version of Axios (v0.12.0), a popular tool that helps your software communicate with other services over the internet. This version has a known flaw that lets anyone send a specially crafted request to slow your server to a crawl — potentially making your app unavailable to real users. Upgrading to a newer version takes a developer less than an hour and fully resolves the issue.
Outdated Lodash Library Could Allow Attackers to Disrupt Your Application
mediumYour application uses an outdated version of Lodash, a very common JavaScript helper library. This version has a flaw that could allow someone to corrupt core JavaScript functionality in your app, potentially causing it to crash or behave unexpectedly. A fix is available and is a straightforward upgrade.
Outdated JavaScript Utility Library Can Be Used to Slow Down Your App
mediumYour application uses an outdated version of a popular JavaScript helper library called Lodash. This version has a known weakness where a malicious user can send specially crafted text input that causes the server to get stuck processing it — like a tongue-twister that freezes a voice assistant. The fix is a straightforward library update.
Outdated Date Library Can Be Used to Slow Down or Crash Your App
mediumYour application is using an old version of Moment.js, a popular tool for handling dates and times. This version has a known weakness: if someone sends it a very long, specially crafted piece of text, it can cause your app to freeze or become unresponsive while it tries to process it. Think of it like a lock that jams when you insert a bent key — the door stops working for everyone until the jam clears.
Outdated jQuery Library Allows Malicious Tampering with Web Page Behaviour
mediumYour website uses an outdated version of jQuery (3.3.1), a popular JavaScript library. This version has a known flaw that could allow an attacker to tamper with how your web pages behave — but only if they can first get crafted data into a specific part of your site. Think of it like a faulty lock on an internal door: it's worth replacing, but someone still needs to get through the front door first.
Outdated Bootstrap Library Contains a Known Script Injection Flaw
mediumYour website uses an outdated version of Bootstrap — a popular design toolkit used by millions of websites. The version in use has a known flaw in its collapsible panel feature that could allow someone to inject malicious code into your pages if they can influence the content on your site. This is a medium-priority issue: it requires specific conditions to exploit, but it is a well-documented vulnerability with a straightforward fix.
Outdated Date Library Can Be Used to Slow Down or Crash Your Application
highYour application uses an outdated version of Moment.js — a popular tool developers use to handle dates and times. This version has a known flaw where sending it an unusually long piece of text can cause it to get stuck processing, slowing your app to a crawl or making it temporarily unavailable to users. This only matters if your app accepts date input directly from users or external sources.
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Outdated AngularJS Library Allows Fake Content to Be Shown to Your Users
mediumYour website uses an old version of AngularJS (a JavaScript framework) that has a known security flaw. Because of this flaw, an attacker could bypass a built-in safety filter and display images or content from unauthorized sources on your pages — a technique known as content spoofing. The bigger concern here is that AngularJS itself is no longer maintained by its creators, meaning this flaw will never receive an official fix.