Description
An issue was discovered in Python before 3.8.18, 3.9.x before 3.9.18, 3.10.x before 3.10.13, and 3.11.x before 3.11.5. It primarily affects servers (such as HTTP servers) that use TLS client authentication. If a TLS server-side socket is created, receives data into the socket buffer, and then is closed quickly, there is a brief window where the SSLSocket instance will detect the socket as "not connected" and won't initiate a handshake, but buffered data will still be readable from the socket buffer. This data will not be authenticated if the server-side TLS peer is expecting client certificate authentication, and is indistinguishable from valid TLS stream data. Data is limited in size to the amount that will fit in the buffer. (The TLS connection cannot directly be used for data exfiltration because the vulnerable code path requires that the connection be closed on initialization of the SSLSocket.)
Details
Affected Packages
| Software | From version | Fixed in |
|---|---|---|
| libpython | — | — |
| python | — | — |
| python-min | — | — |
References
Similar Threats
- High BIT-libpython-2026-4519
- Low BIT-libpython-2026-3479
- Medium BIT-libpython-2026-3644
- Low BIT-libpython-2025-13462
- Medium BIT-libpython-2026-2297
Patch Gap Protection
Running software with known vulnerabilities?
BotEraser can help reduce exposure by blocking IPs associated with exploit activity — even before a patch is available.
Start Free →No credit card required · Results in minutes
ⓘ Data Notice: The information presented above has been compiled from publicly available internet sources. Boteraser aggregates this data solely for informational purposes and does not independently classify, evaluate, or endorse any findings about the vulnerabilities listed. The accuracy and completeness of this information is the sole responsibility of the original publishers. Boteraser and its operators accept no liability for any decisions made based on this data.