VLAN418_RADI – 10.44.100.65

VLAN: 418CIDR: 10.44.100.0/22, 193.224.48.64/27, 192.9.200.0/24NAT: 193.224.49.26Nessus mappa: 1472
Scan: RADIDátum: 2026-02-02 08:22

MEDIUM (2)

SSL Certificate Expiry
Plugin ID: 15901 Port: tcp/443
This plugin checks expiry dates of certificates associated with SSL- enabled services on the target and reports whether any have already expired.
Javasolt megoldás
Purchase or generate a new SSL certificate to replace the existing one.
SSL Certificate Cannot Be Trusted
Plugin ID: 51192 Port: tcp/443
The server's X.509 certificate cannot be trusted. This situation can occur in three different ways, in which the chain of trust can be broken, as stated below : - First, the top of the certificate chain sent by the server might not be descended from a known public certificate authority. This can occur either when the top of the chain is an unrecognized, self-signed certificate, or when intermediate certificates are missing that would connect the top of the certificate chain to a known public certificate authority. - Second, the certificate chain may contain a certificate that is not valid at the time of the scan. This can occur either when the scan occurs before one of the certificate's 'notBefore' dates, or after one of the certificate's 'notAfter' dates. - Third, the certificate chain may contain a signature that either didn't match the certificate's information or could not be verified. Bad signatures can be fixed by getting the certificate with the bad signature to be re-signed by its issuer. Signatures that could not be verified are the result of the certificate's issuer using a signing algorithm that Nessus either does not support or does not recognize. If the remote host is a public host in production, any break in the chain makes it more difficult for users to verify the authenticity and identity of the web server. This could make it easier to carry out man-in-the-middle attacks against the remote host.
Javasolt megoldás
Purchase or generate a proper SSL certificate for this service.

LOW (1)

ICMP Timestamp Request Remote Date Disclosure
Plugin ID: 10114 Port: icmp/0 CVE: CVE-1999-0524
The remote host answers to an ICMP timestamp request. This allows an attacker to know the date that is set on the targeted machine, which may assist an unauthenticated, remote attacker in defeating time-based authentication protocols. Timestamps returned from machines running Windows Vista / 7 / 2008 / 2008 R2 are deliberately incorrect, but usually within 1000 seconds of the actual system time.
Javasolt megoldás
Filter out the ICMP timestamp requests (13), and the outgoing ICMP timestamp replies (14).