Search Results (25 CVEs found)

CVE Vendors Products Updated CVSS v3.1
CVE-2026-13314 1 Pretix 1 Pretix-digital 2026-06-26 N/A
Malicious HTML content could be injected into the content rendered by the pretix-digital plugin.
CVE-2026-13223 1 Pretix 1 Pretix-computop 2026-06-26 N/A
Our payment integration with Computop-based payment methods did not properly validate payment status responses. An attacker could use a successful payment status response from one payment and supply it to the system for a different payment, gaining access to multiple valid tickets with only one payment.
CVE-2026-13222 1 Pretix 1 Pretix-oppwa 2026-06-26 N/A
Our payment integration with Oppwa-based payment methods did not properly validate payment status responses. An attacker could use a successful payment status response from one payment and supply it to the system for a different payment, gaining access to multiple valid tickets with only one payment.
CVE-2026-57536 1 Pretix 1 Pretix-mollie 2026-06-26 N/A
Our payment integration with Mollie did not properly validate payment status responses. An attacker could use a successful payment status response from one payment and supply it to the system for a different payment, gaining access to multiple valid tickets with only one payment.
CVE-2026-57534 1 Pretix 1 Pretix-pages 2026-06-26 N/A
Malicious HTML content could be injected into the content of a page in the pretix-pages plugin.
CVE-2026-57532 1 Pretix 1 Pretix 2026-06-25 N/A
Malicious HTML content contained in the layout specification of a PDF ticket or badge layout was executed when the PDF editor is opened in the browser. This could allow one backend user to inject JavaScript into the browser context of another backend user. Due to requirements of the PDF rendering and editing libraries used, this is one of the few pages in our backend that do not have a strong Content-Security-Policy that would render this capability useless for most scenarios.
CVE-2026-13225 1 Pretix 1 Pretix 2026-06-25 N/A
Malicious HTML content could be injected into the email address of an order, which pretix showed without sanitization on the confirmation page for individual tickets in that order.
CVE-2026-57535 1 Pretix 1 Pretix 2026-06-25 N/A
Content injected to PDF rendering contexts could, in many places, include HTML content including <img> tags. If the src attribute of these images pointed to an URL, the PDF rendering engine would download the image from that place and display it, thereby leaking information about the rendering server and possibly creating an SSRF vector in the local network.
CVE-2026-57533 1 Pretix 1 Pretix 2026-06-25 N/A
Malicious HTML content could be injected into the page pretix shows when redirection to an untrusted page occurs. Since this page has a Content-Security-Policy, this can mainly be used for phishing purposes.
CVE-2026-13350 1 Pretix 1 Venueless 2026-06-25 N/A
Permissions where checked incorrectly during room creation, allowing attackers to create rooms of types they shouldn't be allowed to create.
CVE-2026-12862 1 Pretix 1 Venueless 2026-06-22 N/A
Untrusted user data was passed verbatim to Excel exports for administrators. This allowed formula injection which can be used to compromise the environment of the user loading the file or other data in the file.
CVE-2026-12863 1 Pretix 1 Venueless 2026-06-22 N/A
An unvalidated redirect was contained in Venueless' social login functionality and could be exploited for phishing using trusted domains.
CVE-2026-11764 1 Pretix 1 Pretix 2026-06-09 N/A
When creating an export of all reusable media, the secrets of connected gift cards were included in the export even if the user creating the export does not have permission to view gift cards. This is inconsistent with the UI and API where only the first letters of the gift card secret are shown. Therefore, it allows circumventing a permission boundary.
CVE-2026-9712 1 Pretix 1 Pretix 2026-05-28 N/A
When creating an export through the pretix API, API clients are returned an UUID value for their export job (a long, random string like 35742818-c375-4d15-839f-d49aecce94d6). Using this UUID, the API client can then request the actual file for download. The same kind of UUID is used in other places in pretix when temporary files are generated for internal use or download. One remaining API endpoint, however, wrongfully did not verify if the UUID used for download actually belongs to a file that is supposed to be downloadable and belongs to the correct user. In reality, this is hard to exploit because an attacker would need to have access to a valid UUID for the file they desire which is unlikely to happen without a separate security problem giving them access to logs etc.
CVE-2026-5600 1 Pretix 1 Pretix 2026-04-24 4.3 Medium
A new API endpoint introduced in pretix 2025 that is supposed to return all check-in events of a specific event in fact returns all check-in events belonging to the respective organizer. This allows an API consumer to access information for all other events under the same organizer, even those they should not have access to. These records contain information on the time and result of every ticket scan as well as the ID of the matched ticket. Example: { "id": 123, "successful": true, "error_reason": null, "error_explanation": null, "position": 321, "datetime": "2020-08-23T09:00:00+02:00", "list": 456, "created": "2020-08-23T09:00:00+02:00", "auto_checked_in": false, "gate": null, "device": 1, "device_id": 1, "type": "entry" } An unauthorized user usually has no way to match these IDs (position) back to individual people.
CVE-2026-2415 1 Pretix 1 Pretix 2026-04-18 5.9 Medium
Emails sent by pretix can utilize placeholders that will be filled with customer data. For example, when {name} is used in an email template, it will be replaced with the buyer's name for the final email. This mechanism contained two security-relevant bugs: * It was possible to exfiltrate information about the pretix system through specially crafted placeholder names such as {{event.__init__.__code__.co_filename}}. This way, an attacker with the ability to control email templates (usually every user of the pretix backend) could retrieve sensitive information from the system configuration, including even database passwords or API keys. pretix does include mechanisms to prevent the usage of such malicious placeholders, however due to a mistake in the code, they were not fully effective for the email subject. * Placeholders in subjects and plain text bodies of emails were wrongfully evaluated twice. Therefore, if the first evaluation of a placeholder again contains a placeholder, this second placeholder was rendered. This allows the rendering of placeholders controlled by the ticket buyer, and therefore the exploitation of the first issue as a ticket buyer. Luckily, the only buyer-controlled placeholder available in pretix by default (that is not validated in a way that prevents the issue) is {invoice_company}, which is very unusual (but not impossible) to be contained in an email subject template. In addition to broadening the attack surface of the first issue, this could theoretically also leak information about an order to one of the attendees within that order. However, we also consider this scenario very unlikely under typical conditions. Out of caution, we recommend that you rotate all passwords and API keys contained in your pretix.cfg https://docs.pretix.eu/self-hosting/config/  file.
CVE-2026-2451 1 Pretix 3 Double Opt In Step, Pretix, Pretix-doistep 2026-04-18 6.5 Medium
Emails sent by pretix can utilize placeholders that will be filled with customer data. For example, when {name} is used in an email template, it will be replaced with the buyer's name for the final email. This mechanism contained a security-relevant bug: It was possible to exfiltrate information about the pretix system through specially crafted placeholder names such as {{event.__init__.__code__.co_filename}}. This way, an attacker with the ability to control email templates (usually every user of the pretix backend) could retrieve sensitive information from the system configuration, including even database passwords or API keys. pretix does include mechanisms to prevent the usage of such malicious placeholders, however due to a mistake in the code, they were not fully effective for this plugin. Out of caution, we recommend that you rotate all passwords and API keys contained in your pretix.cfg file.
CVE-2026-2452 1 Pretix 3 Newsletters, Pretix, Pretix-newsletter 2026-04-17 6.5 Medium
Emails sent by pretix can utilize placeholders that will be filled with customer data. For example, when {name} is used in an email template, it will be replaced with the buyer's name for the final email. This mechanism contained a security-relevant bug: It was possible to exfiltrate information about the pretix system through specially crafted placeholder names such as {{event.__init__.__code__.co_filename}}. This way, an attacker with the ability to control email templates (usually every user of the pretix backend) could retrieve sensitive information from the system configuration, including even database passwords or API keys. pretix does include mechanisms to prevent the usage of such malicious placeholders, however due to a mistake in the code, they were not fully effective for this plugin. Out of caution, we recommend that you rotate all passwords and API keys contained in your pretix.cfg https://docs.pretix.eu/self-hosting/config/  file.
CVE-2025-14882 1 Pretix 1 Pretix 2026-04-15 N/A
An API endpoint allowed access to sensitive files from other users by knowing the UUID of the file that were not intended to be accessible by UUID only.
CVE-2025-14881 1 Pretix 1 Pretix 2026-04-15 N/A
Multiple API endpoints allowed access to sensitive files from other users by knowing the UUID of the file that were not intended to be accessible by UUID only.