CVE-2025-7347: IDOR in Dinibh Puzzle's Dinibh Patrol Tracking System
Authorization Bypass Through User-Controlled Key vulnerability in Dinibh Puzzle Software Solutions Dinibh Patrol Tracking System allows Exploitation of Trusted Identifiers.
This issue affects Dinibh Patrol Tracking System: through 10022026.
NOTE: The vendor was contacted early about this disclosure but did not respond in any way.
Security readout for executives and security teams
Plain-English summary
A logged-in user may be able to access or alter records they should not control in Dinibh Patrol Tracking System. The issue is high severity because confidentiality, integrity, and availability are all rated high impact. The sources do not identify a vendor patch or confirmed exploitation.
Executive priority
Treat as high priority if the product is in use. The business risk is unauthorized access or manipulation of patrol-tracking data, but urgency depends on exposure and whether vendor guidance becomes available.
Technical view
CVE-2025-7347 is an authorization bypass through user-controlled trusted identifiers, mapped to CWE-639. It affects Dinibh Puzzle Software Solutions Dinibh Patrol Tracking System through version 10022026. CVSS 3.1 is 8.8: network reachable, low complexity, low privileges, no user interaction, unchanged scope.
Likely exposure
Exposure is limited to organizations using Dinibh Patrol Tracking System, especially deployments reachable over a network by authenticated users. The source bundle does not provide CPEs, deployment architecture, or affected modules.
Exploitation context
No active exploitation is supported by the provided sources, and the CVE is not marked KEV. The CVSS vector indicates exploitation requires an authenticated low-privilege account but no user interaction.
Researcher notes
Evidence is sparse. The advisory describes CWE-639-style IDOR but does not name endpoints, patches, workarounds, or exploit observations. Avoid assuming broader Dinibh products are affected without vendor or advisory confirmation.
Mitigation direction
Check vendor and government advisory pages for updated remediation guidance.
Restrict network access to the tracking system to trusted users and locations.
Review server-side object authorization for every user-controlled identifier.
Apply least-privilege roles and remove unnecessary accounts.
Monitor for cross-account or unexpected record access patterns.
Validation and detection
Inventory whether Dinibh Patrol Tracking System is deployed.
Confirm whether deployed versions are through 10022026.
Identify exposed login portals and authenticated user populations.
Review logs for unauthorized record reads, writes, or deletions.
Validate object-level access controls in a safe test environment.
Generated from the cited source records. This long-tail analysis has not been individually reviewed by a named human.
Potential ATT&CK relevance
Conservative CVE-to-ATT&CK context
These mappings and lookup hints may be relevant to the vulnerability behavior, CWE, affected product, or exposure path. Glexia-inferred context is not an official MITRE, ATT&CK, CWE, or CVE Program mapping.
ATT&CK lookup starting points
Use these exact CWE pages and searches to review the Glexia ATT&CK library from this CVE's weakness and description context.
cwe · low confidence lookup
CWE-639: Exact CWE lookup
Use the exact CWE identifier as the starting point before reviewing related ATT&CK behavior. Open the exact CWE lookup page first, then review the ATT&CK searches from that MITRE weakness context. This is a Glexia lookup hint, not an official ATT&CK mapping.
The CVE wording references privilege impact, so privilege escalation and authorization behavior review may help. This is a Glexia inferred lookup path, not an official MITRE, ATT&CK, or CVE Program mapping.
These fields come from the CVE record and ADP containers, not from Glexia's Take. They preserve time-varying source decisions such as CISA SSVC, KEV status, CVSS metrics, and provider references.
1CVSS vectors
3Timeline events
1ADP providers
3Source links
SSVC decision data
CISA-ADPCISA Coordinator
Timestamp
Version
2.0.3
Exploitation: noneAutomatable: noTechnical Impact: total
CVSS vector scores
1 official score
We collect every scored CVSS vector available in the official CNA and ADP containers. When more than one version is present, the table keeps the source vectors side by side instead of collapsing them into the highest score.
CWE links open Glexia weakness intelligence pages with official CWE context, developer remediation guidance, and related CVE mappings.
CWE-639 · source CWE mapping
Authorization Bypass Through User-Controlled Key
Authorization Bypass Through User-Controlled Key represents a recurring weakness pattern that can create exploitable paths when design, validation, or implementation controls are missing.