CVE Catalog

CVE-2026-32315

MediumCVSS 5.5
Published: Updated: Translated: NVD NIST

Exploitation Probability (EPSS)

High risk
2.90%

85th percentile — higher than 85% of all known CVEs

Summary

motionEye (mEye) is an online interface for motion software, a video surveillance program with motion detection. Versions prior to 0.44.0 create the configuration file /etc/motioneye/motion.conf with 644 permissions, making it readable by any local user on the system, leading to the exposure of sensitive data including the admin password.

Risk Assessment

The exposure of the admin password and camera configuration data poses a risk of privilege escalation by local users, potentially leading to full system compromise.

Recommendation

It is recommended to upgrade to version 0.44.0 or later to secure configuration files from unauthorized access.

Original NVD description (English source)

motionEye (mEye) is an online interface for motion software, a video surveillance program with motion detection. Versions prior to 0.44.0 create the configuration file /etc/motioneye/motion.conf with 644 permissions (-rw-r--r--), making it readable by any local user on the system. This file contains sensitive data including the admin password hash, which can be leveraged by other vulnerabilities to escalate privileges. Additionally, per-camera configuration files (camera-*.conf) are also created with the same 644 permissions, potentially exposing camera-specific credentials and settings. The exposed SHA1 admin password hash can be cracked offline to recover the plaintext password, used directly to forge authenticated admin API requests via the signature authentication weakness (GHSA-45h7-499j-7ww3), and chained with the OS command injection flaw (CVE-2025-60787) to escalate a local unprivileged user to the Motion daemon user (often root), enabling full system compromise. This issue has been fixed in version 0.44.0.

Vulnerability data from NVD (NIST) · CISA KEV · EPSS