Overview
The report examines a critical security vulnerability, CVE-2025-49237, which is a Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) issue in POEditor. This vulnerability affects versions from n/a through 0.9.10 of POEditor and could lead to potential system compromise or data leakage. As such, it is of high importance to developers, security analysts, and system administrators who are responsible for maintaining the security of their systems.
Vulnerability Summary
CVE ID: CVE-2025-49237
Severity: High (CVSS 7.4)
Attack Vector: Network
Privileges Required: None
User Interaction: Required
Impact: Successful exploitation could lead to potential system compromise or 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
POEditor | Up to 0.9.10
How the Exploit Works
The vulnerability lies in the improper handling of CSRF tokens by POEditor, allowing an attacker to trick a victim into performing an action without their knowledge or consent. Moreover, it allows for Path Traversal, letting an attacker access, read, or modify files on the server that they should not have access to.
Conceptual Example Code
Here is a brief conceptual example of how the vulnerability might be exploited via an HTTP request:
POST /poeditor/path HTTP/1.1
Host: target.example.com
Content-Type: application/json
{
"path": "../../../../../../../etc/passwd"
}
In the above conceptual example, the attacker is attempting to traverse the file system to access the ‘/etc/passwd’ file, which could potentially contain sensitive information.
Mitigation
To mitigate this vulnerability, it is recommended to apply the patch provided by the vendor. If the patch cannot be applied immediately, using a Web Application Firewall (WAF) or Intrusion Detection System (IDS) can serve as a temporary mitigation strategy.
