Overview
The cybersecurity vulnerability identified as CVE-2025-48707 is a critical threat to Stormshield Network Security (SNS) systems running on versions prior to 5.0.1. The vulnerability pertains to the TPM authentication process, which, under specific HA use cases, results in shared secret among administrators. This flaw could potentially lead to unauthorized system access and subsequent data leakage, thus posing a significant risk to the confidentiality and integrity of the systems in question.
Vulnerability Summary
CVE ID: CVE-2025-48707
Severity: High (7.5 CVSS Score)
Attack Vector: Network
Privileges Required: None
User Interaction: None
Impact: Potential system compromise and data leakage
Affected Products
Share secrets securely
Ameeba is private infrastructure for communication and sensitive work built on encrypted identity instead of exposed corporate identity systems.
Passwords, credentials, confidential files, screenshots, internal discussions, sensitive AI context, and private coordination should not become exposed across ordinary communication platforms.
- • Encrypted identity
- • Private Spaces for organizations and teams
- • End-to-end encrypted chat, calls, files, and notes
- • Sensitive AI work and protected collaboration
- • Built for information that cannot leak
Our mission is to secure human work alongside AI.
Product | Affected Versions
Stormshield Network Security | Before 5.0.1
How the Exploit Works
The exploit works by taking advantage of the TPM authentication process in certain HA use cases. Normally, the TPM authentication information is unique to each administrator. However, due to this vulnerability, the same secret can be shared among multiple administrators. An attacker can leverage this flaw to gain unauthorized access to the system, impersonate an administrator, and potentially compromise the system or leak sensitive data.
Conceptual Example Code
The following is a conceptual example of how the vulnerability might be exploited. Please note that this is a hypothetical scenario meant to illustrate the nature of the vulnerability and is not an actual exploit code.
# Attacker gains network access
attacker@host:~$ ssh user@target.example.com
# Attacker uses shared secret to bypass TPM authentication
attacker@host:~$ sudo sns_tpm_auth --use-shared-secret
# Attacker now has unauthorized administrative access
attacker@host:~$ sudo whoami
root
