CVE-2013-4733: The web server on the Digital Alert Systems DASDEC EAS device before 2.0-2 and the Monroe Electronics R189...
The web server on the Digital Alert Systems DASDEC EAS device before 2.0-2 and the Monroe Electronics R189 One-Net EAS device before 2.0-2 allows remote attackers to obtain sensitive configuration and status information by reading log files.
Security readout for executives and security teams
This flaw lets a remote, unauthenticated attacker read log files from certain Emergency Alert System devices, exposing sensitive configuration and status information. The main business concern is disclosure of operational details for alerting infrastructure, not direct system takeover based on the supplied evidence. Exposure is most likely where legacy DASDEC or R189 One-Net EAS web interfaces remain reachable from administrative networks, vendors, or the internet. Organizations without an EAS asset inventory may miss these older devices because they are operational technology, not standard IT servers. Treat this as high priority for organizations operating EAS equipment, especially broadcasters, public safety entities, and managed facilities. The issue exposes sensitive alerting infrastructure details and involves remote unauthenticated access, but supplied sources do not indicate active exploitation or system takeover. Mitigation focus: Inventory DASDEC and R189 One-Net EAS devices and record firmware versions.; Update affected devices to 2.0-2 or later where vendor guidance supports it.; Restrict EAS web interfaces to trusted administrative networks only..
Prepared
Generated from the cited source records. This long-tail analysis has not been individually reviewed by a named human.
Potential ATT&CK relevance
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Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File
Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File represents a recurring weakness pattern that can create exploitable paths when design, validation, or implementation controls are missing.