It was discovered that libvpx did not properly manage memory. An attacker could possibly use this issue to cause applications using libvpx to crash, resulting in a denial of service, or possibly execute arbitrary code.
{ "availability": "Available with Ubuntu Pro (Infra-only): https://ubuntu.com/pro", "binaries": [ { "binary_version": "1.5.0-2ubuntu1.1+esm4", "binary_name": "libvpx-dev" }, { "binary_version": "1.5.0-2ubuntu1.1+esm4", "binary_name": "libvpx3" }, { "binary_version": "1.5.0-2ubuntu1.1+esm4", "binary_name": "vpx-tools" } ] }
{ "availability": "Available with Ubuntu Pro (Infra-only): https://ubuntu.com/pro", "binaries": [ { "binary_version": "1.7.0-3ubuntu0.18.04.1+esm3", "binary_name": "libvpx-dev" }, { "binary_version": "1.7.0-3ubuntu0.18.04.1+esm3", "binary_name": "libvpx5" }, { "binary_version": "1.7.0-3ubuntu0.18.04.1+esm3", "binary_name": "vpx-tools" } ] }