Focus on barco vulnerabilities and metrics.
Last updated: 08 Mar 2025, 23:25 UTC
This page consolidates all known Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs) associated with barco. We track both calendar-based metrics (using fixed periods) and rolling metrics (using gliding windows) to give you a comprehensive view of security trends and risk evolution. Use these insights to assess risk and plan your patching strategy.
For a broader perspective on cybersecurity threats, explore the comprehensive list of CVEs by vendor and product. Stay updated on critical vulnerabilities affecting major software and hardware providers.
Total barco CVEs: 31
Earliest CVE date: 12 Jan 2017, 23:59 UTC
Latest CVE date: 07 Sep 2021, 18:15 UTC
Latest CVE reference: CVE-2021-38142
30-day Count (Rolling): 0
365-day Count (Rolling): 0
Calendar-based Variation
Calendar-based Variation compares a fixed calendar period (e.g., this month versus the same month last year), while Rolling Growth Rate uses a continuous window (e.g., last 30 days versus the previous 30 days) to capture trends independent of calendar boundaries.
Month Variation (Calendar): 0%
Year Variation (Calendar): 0%
Month Growth Rate (30-day Rolling): 0.0%
Year Growth Rate (365-day Rolling): 0.0%
Average CVSS: 6.61
Max CVSS: 10.0
Critical CVEs (≥9): 6
Range | Count |
---|---|
0.0-3.9 | 2 |
4.0-6.9 | 15 |
7.0-8.9 | 8 |
9.0-10.0 | 6 |
These are the five CVEs with the highest CVSS scores for barco, sorted by severity first and recency.
Barco MirrorOp Windows Sender before 2.5.3.65 uses cleartext HTTP and thus allows rogue software upgrades. An attacker on the local network can achieve remote code execution on any computer that tries to update Windows Sender due to the fact that the upgrade mechanism is not secured (is not protected with TLS).
An issue was discovered in Barco MirrorOp Windows Sender before 2.5.4.70. An attacker in the local network is able to achieve Remote Code Execution (with user privileges of the local user) on any device that tries to connect to a WePresent presentation system.
The NDN-210 has a web administration panel which is made available over https. There is a command injection issue that will allow authenticated users to the administration panel to perform authenticated remote code execution. An issue exists in ngpsystemcmd.php in which the http parameters "x_modules" and "y_modules" are not properly handled. The NDN-210 is part of Barco TransForm N solution and this vulnerability is patched from TransForm N version 3.8 onwards.
The NDN-210 has a web administration panel which is made available over https. There is a command injection issue that will allow authenticated users to the administration panel to perform authenticated remote code execution. An issue exists in split_card_cmd.php in which the http parameter "locking" is not properly handled. The NDN-210 is part of Barco TransForm N solution and this vulnerability is patched from TransForm N version 3.8 onwards.
Barco TransForm N before 3.8 allows Command Injection (issue 2 of 4). The NDN-210 has a web administration panel which is made available over https. There is a command injection issue that will allow authenticated users of the administration panel to perform authenticated remote code execution. An issue exists in split_card_cmd.php in which the http parameters xmodules, ymodules and savelocking are not properly handled. The NDN-210 is part of Barco TransForm N solution and includes the patch from TransForm N version 3.8 onwards.
Barco TransForm NDN-210 Lite, NDN-210 Pro, NDN-211 Lite, and NDN-211 Pro before 3.8 allows Command Injection (issue 1 of 4). The NDN-210 has a web administration panel which is made available over https. The logon method is basic authentication. There is a command injection issue that will result in unauthenticated remote code execution in the username and password fields of the logon prompt. The NDN-210 is part of Barco TransForm N solution and includes the patch from TransForm N version 3.8 onwards.
Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W firmware includes a hardcoded API account and password that is discoverable by inspecting the firmware image. A malicious actor could use this password to access authenticated, administrative functions in the API. Affected Version(s): 2.5.1.8, 2.5.0.25, 2.5.0.24, 2.4.1.19.
Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W devices use Hard-coded Credentials (issue 2 of 2). Affected Version(s): 2.5.1.8, 2.5.0.25, 2.5.0.24, 2.4.1.19. The Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W device has a hardcoded root password hash included in the firmware image. Exploiting CVE-2020-28329, CVE-2020-28330 and CVE-2020-28331 could potentially be used in a simple and automated exploit chain to go from unauthenticated remote attacker to root shell.
Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W devices allow Authentication Bypass. Affected Version(s): 2.5.1.8. The Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W web interface does not use session cookies for tracking authenticated sessions. Instead, the web interface uses a "SEID" token that is appended to the end of URLs in GET requests. Thus the "SEID" would be exposed in web proxy logs and browser history. An attacker that is able to capture the "SEID" and originate requests from the same IP address (via a NAT device or web proxy) would be able to access the user interface of the device without having to know the credentials.
Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W devices download code without an Integrity Check. Affected Version(s): 2.5.1.8, 2.5.0.25, 2.5.0.24, 2.4.1.19. The Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W firmware does not perform verification of digitally signed firmware updates and is susceptible to processing and installing modified/malicious images.
Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W devices have Unprotected Transport of Credentials. Affected Version(s): 2.5.1.8. An attacker armed with hardcoded API credentials (retrieved by exploiting CVE-2020-28329) can issue an authenticated query to display the admin password for the main web user interface listening on port 443/tcp of a Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W device.
Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W devices have Improper Access Control. Affected Version(s): 2.5.1.8. The Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W device has an SSH daemon included in the firmware image. By default, the SSH daemon is disabled and does not start at system boot. The system initialization scripts read a device configuration file variable to see if the SSH daemon should be started. The web interface does not provide a visible capability to alter this configuration file variable. However, a malicious actor can include this variable in a POST such that the SSH daemon will be started when the device boots.
Barco ClickShare Button R9861500D01 devices before 1.9.0 allow Information exposure (issue 2 of 2).. The encryption key of the media content which is shared between a ClickShare Button and a ClickShare Base Unit is randomly generated for each new session and communicated over a TLS connection. An attacker who is able to perform a Man-in-the-Middle attack between the TLS connection, is able to obtain the encryption key.
Barco ClickShare Button R9861500D01 devices before 1.9.0 have incorrect Credentials Management. The ClickShare Button implements encryption at rest which uses a one-time programmable (OTP) AES encryption key. This key is shared across all ClickShare Buttons of model R9861500D01.
Barco ClickShare Button R9861500D01 devices before 1.10.0.13 have Missing Support for Integrity Check. The Barco signed 'Clickshare_For_Windows.exe' binary on the ClickShare Button (R9861500D01) loads a number of DLL files dynamically without verifying their integrity.
Barco ClickShare Huddle CS-100 devices before 1.9.0 and CSE-200 devices before 1.9.0 have incorrect Credentials Management. The ClickShare Base Unit implements encryption at rest using encryption keys which are shared across all ClickShare Base Units of models CS-100 & CSE-200.
Barco ClickShare Button R9861500D01 devices before 1.10.0.13 have Missing Support for Integrity Check. The ClickShare Button does not verify the integrity of the mutable content on the UBIFS partition before being used.
Barco ClickShare Button R9861500D01 devices before 1.9.0 allow Information Exposure. The encrypted ClickShare Button firmware contains the private key of a test device-certificate.
Barco ClickShare Button R9861500D01 devices before 1.9.0 allow OS Command Injection. The embedded 'dongle_bridge' program used to expose the functionalities of the ClickShare Button to a USB host, is vulnerable to OS command injection vulnerabilities. These vulnerabilities could lead to code execution on the ClickShare Button with the privileges of the user 'nobody'.
Barco ClickShare Button R9861500D01 devices before 1.9.0 have Insufficiently Protected Credentials. The root account (present for access via debug interfaces, which are by default not enabled on production devices) of the embedded Linux on the ClickShare Button is using a weak password.
On Barco ClickShare Button R9861500D01 devices (before firmware version 1.9.0) JTAG access is disabled after ROM code execution. This means that JTAG access is possible when the system is running code from ROM before handing control over to embedded firmware.
Barco ClickShare Button R9861500D01 devices before 1.9.0 have Improper Following of a Certificate's Chain of Trust. The embedded 'dongle_bridge' program used to expose the functionalities of the ClickShare Button to a USB host, does not properly validate the whole certificate chain.
The Crestron AM-100 firmware 1.6.0.2, Crestron AM-101 firmware 2.7.0.1, Barco wePresent WiPG-1000P firmware 2.3.0.10, Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W before firmware 2.4.1.19, Extron ShareLink 200/250 firmware 2.0.3.4, Teq AV IT WIPS710 firmware 1.1.0.7, SHARP PN-L703WA firmware 1.4.2.3, Optoma WPS-Pro firmware 1.0.0.5, Blackbox HD WPS firmware 1.0.0.5, InFocus LiteShow3 firmware 1.0.16, and InFocus LiteShow4 2.0.0.7 are vulnerable to a stack buffer overflow in libAwgCgi.so's PARSERtoCHAR function. A remote, unauthenticated attacker can use this vulnerability to execute arbitrary code as root via a crafted request to the return.cgi endpoint.
The Crestron AM-100 firmware 1.6.0.2, Crestron AM-101 firmware 2.7.0.1, Barco wePresent WiPG-1000P firmware 2.3.0.10, Barco wePresent WiPG-1600W before firmware 2.4.1.19, Extron ShareLink 200/250 firmware 2.0.3.4, Teq AV IT WIPS710 firmware 1.1.0.7, SHARP PN-L703WA firmware 1.4.2.3, Optoma WPS-Pro firmware 1.0.0.5, Blackbox HD WPS firmware 1.0.0.5, InFocus LiteShow3 firmware 1.0.16, and InFocus LiteShow4 2.0.0.7 are vulnerable to command injection via the file_transfer.cgi HTTP endpoint. A remote, unauthenticated attacker can use this vulnerability to execute operating system commands as root.
An issue was discovered on Barco ClickShare CSE-200 and CS-100 Base Units with firmware before 1.6.0.3. Sending an arbitrary unexpected string to TCP port 7100 respecting a certain frequency timing disconnects all clients and results in a crash of the Unit.
A command injection was identified on Barco ClickShare Base Unit devices with CSM-1 firmware before 1.7.0.3 and CSC-1 firmware before 1.10.0.10. An attacker with access to the product's web API can exploit this vulnerability to completely compromise the vulnerable device.
An issue was discovered in Barco ClickShare CSM-1 firmware before v1.7.0.3 and CSC-1 firmware before v1.10.0.10. An authenticated user can manage the wallpaper collection in the webUI to be shown as background on the ClickShare product. By uploading a wallpaper with a specially crafted name, an HTML injection can be triggered as special characters are not neutralized before output.
Barco ClickShare CSC-1 devices with firmware before 01.09.03 allow remote attackers to obtain the root password by downloading and extracting the firmware image.
Directory traversal vulnerability in the wallpaper parsing functionality in Barco ClickShare CSC-1 devices with firmware before 01.09.03, CSM-1 devices with firmware before 01.06.02, and CSE-200 devices with firmware before 01.03.02 allows remote attackers to read /etc/shadow via unspecified vectors.
Cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in wallpaper.php in the Base Unit in Barco ClickShare CSC-1 devices with firmware before 01.09.03, CSM-1 devices with firmware before 01.06.02, and CSE-200 devices with firmware before 01.03.02 allows remote attackers to inject arbitrary web script or HTML via unspecified vectors.
Barco ClickShare CSC-1 devices with firmware before 01.09.03 and CSM-1 devices with firmware before 01.06.02 allow remote attackers to execute arbitrary code via unspecified vectors.