CVE-2025-53818 is a low severity vulnerability with a CVSS score of 0.0. No known public exploits at this time.
Very low probability of exploitation
EPSS predicts the probability of exploitation in the next 30 days based on real-world threat data, complementing CVSS severity scores with actual risk assessment.
The MCP Server at https://github.com/Sunwood-ai-labs/github-kanban-mcp-server/ is written in a way that is vulnerable to command injection vulnerability attacks as part of some of its MCP Server tool definition and implementation.
The MCP Server exposes the tool add_comment which relies on Node.js child process API exec to execute the GitHub (gh) command, is an unsafe and vulnerable API if concatenated with untrusted user input.
Data flows from the tool definition here which takes in args.issue_number and calls handleAddComment() in this definitino that uses exec in an insecure way.
Vulnerable line of code: https://github.com/Sunwood-ai-labs/github-kanban-mcp-server/blob/main/src/handlers/comment-handlers.ts#L8-L23
export async function handleAddComment(args: {
repo: string;
issue_number: string;
body: string;
state?: 'open' | 'closed';
}): Promise<ToolResponse> {
const tempFile = 'comment_body.md';
try {
// ステータスの変更が指定されている場合は先に処理
if (args.state) {
try {
const command = args.state === 'closed' ? 'close' : 'reopen';
await execAsync(
`gh issue ${command} ${args.issue_number} --repo ${args.repo}`
);
When LLMs are tricked through prompt injection (and other techniques and attack vectors) to call the tool with input that uses special shell characters such as ; rm -rf /tmp;# (be careful actually executing this payload) and other payload variations, the full command-line text will be interepted by the shell and result in other commands except of ps executing on the host running the MCP Server.
Reference example from prior security research on this topic, demonstrating how a similarly vulnerable MCP Server connected to Cursor is abused with prompt injection to bypass the developer's intended command:

Please cite this page when referencing data from Strobes VI. Proper attribution helps support our vulnerability intelligence research.
User initiated and remote command injection on a running MCP Server.
exec. Use execFile instead, which pins the command and provides the arguments as array elements.-- notation to terminate command and command-line flag, and indicate that the text after the -- double dash notation is benign value.Disclosed by Liran Tal