Description
It was found that OpenSSL's BigNumber Squaring implementation could produce
incorrect results under certain special conditions. This flaw could
possibly affect certain OpenSSL library functionality, such as RSA
blinding. Note that this issue occurred rarely and with a low probability,
and there is currently no known way of exploiting it. (CVE-2014-3570)
It was discovered that OpenSSL would perform an ECDH key exchange with a
non-ephemeral key even when the ephemeral ECDH cipher suite was selected.
A malicious server could make a TLS/SSL client using OpenSSL use a weaker
key exchange method than the one requested by the user. (CVE-2014-3572)
It was discovered that OpenSSL would accept ephemeral RSA keys when using
non-export RSA cipher suites. A malicious server could make a TLS/SSL
client using OpenSSL use a weaker key exchange method. (CVE-2015-0204)
Multiple flaws were found in the way OpenSSL parsed X.509 certificates.
An attacker could use these flaws to modify an X.509 certificate to produce
a certificate with a different fingerprint without invalidating its
signature, and possibly bypass fingerprint-based blacklisting in
applications. (CVE-2014-8275)
It was found that an OpenSSL server would, under certain conditions, accept
Diffie-Hellman client certificates without the use of a private key.
An attacker could use a user's client certificate to authenticate as that
user, without needing the private key. (CVE-2015-0205)