
Cloud Vulnerability DB
An open project to list all known cloud vulnerabilities and Cloud Service Provider security issues
Adobe Experience Manager versions 6.5.22 and earlier are affected by a stored Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerability that could be abused by a low privileged attacker to inject malicious scripts into vulnerable form fields. The vulnerability was discovered and disclosed on June 10, 2025, and was assigned by Adobe Systems Incorporated (NVD, CVE).
The vulnerability is classified as a stored Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerability (CWE-79) with a CVSS v3.1 base score of 5.4 (Medium). The attack vector is characterized by CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:L/UI:R/S:C/C:L/I:L/A:N, indicating network accessibility, low attack complexity, required low privileges, and user interaction (NVD).
When exploited, this vulnerability allows malicious JavaScript execution in a victim's browser when they browse to a page containing the vulnerable field. The impact is considered medium severity, affecting both confidentiality and integrity with low impact, while not affecting availability (NVD).
The affected versions include Adobe Experience Manager 6.5.22 and earlier, with fixes available in version 6.5.23.0 for standard installations and version 2025.5.0 for AEM Cloud Service (NVD).
Source: This report was generated using AI
Free Vulnerability Assessment
Evaluate your cloud security practices across 9 security domains to benchmark your risk level and identify gaps in your defenses.
An open project to list all known cloud vulnerabilities and Cloud Service Provider security issues
A comprehensive threat intelligence database of cloud security incidents, actors, tools and techniques
A step-by-step framework for modeling and improving SaaS and PaaS tenant isolation
Get a personalized demo
“Best User Experience I have ever seen, provides full visibility to cloud workloads.”
“Wiz provides a single pane of glass to see what is going on in our cloud environments.”
“We know that if Wiz identifies something as critical, it actually is.”