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  <DocumentTitle xml:lang="en">putty-0.81-1.1 on GA media</DocumentTitle>
  <DocumentType>SUSE Patch</DocumentType>
  <DocumentPublisher Type="Vendor">
    <ContactDetails>security@suse.de</ContactDetails>
    <IssuingAuthority>SUSE Security Team</IssuingAuthority>
  </DocumentPublisher>
  <DocumentTracking>
    <Identification>
      <ID>openSUSE-SU-2024:13868-1</ID>
    </Identification>
    <Status>Final</Status>
    <Version>1</Version>
    <RevisionHistory>
      <Revision>
        <Number>1</Number>
        <Date>2024-06-15T00:00:00Z</Date>
        <Description>current</Description>
      </Revision>
    </RevisionHistory>
    <InitialReleaseDate>2024-06-15T00:00:00Z</InitialReleaseDate>
    <CurrentReleaseDate>2024-06-15T00:00:00Z</CurrentReleaseDate>
    <Generator>
      <Engine>cve-database/bin/generate-cvrf.pl</Engine>
      <Date>2017-02-24T01:00:00Z</Date>
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  <DocumentNotes>
    <Note Title="Topic" Type="Summary" Ordinal="1" xml:lang="en">putty-0.81-1.1 on GA media</Note>
    <Note Title="Details" Type="General" Ordinal="2" xml:lang="en">These are all security issues fixed in the putty-0.81-1.1 package on the GA media of openSUSE Tumbleweed.</Note>
    <Note Title="Terms of Use" Type="Legal Disclaimer" Ordinal="3" xml:lang="en">The CVRF data is provided by SUSE under the Creative Commons License 4.0 with Attribution (CC-BY-4.0).</Note>
    <Note Title="Patchnames" Type="Details" Ordinal="4" xml:lang="en">openSUSE-Tumbleweed-2024-13868</Note>
  </DocumentNotes>
  <DocumentDistribution xml:lang="en">Copyright SUSE LLC under the Creative Commons License 4.0 with Attribution (CC-BY-4.0)</DocumentDistribution>
  <DocumentReferences>
    <Reference Type="Self">
      <URL>https://www.suse.com/support/security/rating/</URL>
      <Description>SUSE Security Ratings</Description>
    </Reference>
    <Reference Type="Self">
      <URL>https://www.suse.com/security/cve/CVE-2024-31497/</URL>
      <Description>SUSE CVE CVE-2024-31497 page</Description>
    </Reference>
  </DocumentReferences>
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    <Branch Type="Product Family" Name="openSUSE Tumbleweed">
      <Branch Type="Product Name" Name="openSUSE Tumbleweed">
        <FullProductName ProductID="openSUSE Tumbleweed" CPE="cpe:/o:opensuse:tumbleweed">openSUSE Tumbleweed</FullProductName>
      </Branch>
    </Branch>
    <Branch Type="Product Version" Name="putty-0.81-1.1">
      <FullProductName ProductID="putty-0.81-1.1">putty-0.81-1.1</FullProductName>
    </Branch>
    <Relationship ProductReference="putty-0.81-1.1" RelationType="Default Component Of" RelatesToProductReference="openSUSE Tumbleweed">
      <FullProductName ProductID="openSUSE Tumbleweed:putty-0.81-1.1">putty-0.81-1.1 as a component of openSUSE Tumbleweed</FullProductName>
    </Relationship>
  </ProductTree>
  <Vulnerability xmlns="http://www.icasi.org/CVRF/schema/vuln/1.1" Ordinal="1">
    <Notes>
      <Note Title="Vulnerability Description" Type="General" Ordinal="1" xml:lang="en">In PuTTY 0.68 through 0.80 before 0.81, biased ECDSA nonce generation allows an attacker to recover a user's NIST P-521 secret key via a quick attack in approximately 60 signatures. This is especially important in a scenario where an adversary is able to read messages signed by PuTTY or Pageant. The required set of signed messages may be publicly readable because they are stored in a public Git service that supports use of SSH for commit signing, and the signatures were made by Pageant through an agent-forwarding mechanism. In other words, an adversary may already have enough signature information to compromise a victim's private key, even if there is no further use of vulnerable PuTTY versions. After a key compromise, an adversary may be able to conduct supply-chain attacks on software maintained in Git. A second, independent scenario is that the adversary is an operator of an SSH server to which the victim authenticates (for remote login or file copy), even though this server is not fully trusted by the victim, and the victim uses the same private key for SSH connections to other services operated by other entities. Here, the rogue server operator (who would otherwise have no way to determine the victim's private key) can derive the victim's private key, and then use it for unauthorized access to those other services. If the other services include Git services, then again it may be possible to conduct supply-chain attacks on software maintained in Git. This also affects, for example, FileZilla before 3.67.0, WinSCP before 6.3.3, TortoiseGit before 2.15.0.1, and TortoiseSVN through 1.14.6.</Note>
    </Notes>
    <CVE>CVE-2024-31497</CVE>
    <ProductStatuses>
      <Status Type="Fixed">
        <ProductID>openSUSE Tumbleweed:putty-0.81-1.1</ProductID>
      </Status>
    </ProductStatuses>
    <Threats>
      <Threat Type="Impact">
        <Description>moderate</Description>
      </Threat>
    </Threats>
    <Remediations>
      <Remediation Type="Vendor Fix">
        <Description xml:lang="en">To install this SUSE Security Update use the SUSE recommended installation methods like YaST online_update or "zypper patch".
</Description>
        <URL/>
      </Remediation>
    </Remediations>
    <References>
      <Reference>
        <URL>https://www.suse.com/security/cve/CVE-2024-31497.html</URL>
        <Description>CVE-2024-31497</Description>
      </Reference>
      <Reference>
        <URL>https://bugzilla.suse.com/1222864</URL>
        <Description>SUSE Bug 1222864</Description>
      </Reference>
    </References>
  </Vulnerability>
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