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CVE-2026-49992 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.
Kimai 2.56.0 contains authenticated cross-site request forgery issues in its default team creation shortcuts for projects, customers, and activities. These endpoints are exposed through GET routes and directly create or reuse a Team, add the current user as teamlead, and bind the target object to that team.
As a result, an attacker can trick a logged-in user with the required permissions into visiting a malicious page and cause unauthorized changes to team, teamlead, and object-binding relationships. This is a real authorization-structure modification issue rather than a harmless UI shortcut.
The issue affects at least the following routes:
GET /en/admin/project/{id}/create_teamGET /en/admin/customer/{id}/create_teamGET /en/admin/activity/{id}/create_teamEach of these routes is a GET endpoint, yet each performs persistent writes that alter authorization structure:
TeamteamleadProject, Customer, or Activity to that teamA PoC was provided, but removed for security reasons.
This vulnerability allows an attacker to remotely alter permission topology while the victim is logged in. A successful exploit can create or reuse a team, assign the victim as its teamlead, and bind a project, customer, or activity to that team without intentional user action.
The pre-requisite is, that the logged-in user already has access to manage permissions of the object in question.
Because these routes modify authorization structure rather than a simple personal preference, the business impact can extend into visibility rules, assignment scope, team-based access control, reporting, and later privilege-expansion chains. This makes the issue materially more serious than a low-value cosmetic CSRF.
POST endpointsPlease cite this page when referencing data from Strobes VI. Proper attribution helps support our vulnerability intelligence research.
See https://www.kimai.org/en/security/ghsa-pgcc-vfmc-7cw5