In WordPress before 4.9.9 and 5.x before 5.0.1, the user-activation page could be read by a search engine's web crawler if an unusual configuration were chosen. The search engine could then index and display a user's e-mail address and (rarely) the password that was generated by default.
{
"binaries": [
{
"binary_name": "wordpress",
"binary_version": "4.4.2+dfsg-1ubuntu1"
},
{
"binary_name": "wordpress-l10n",
"binary_version": "4.4.2+dfsg-1ubuntu1"
},
{
"binary_name": "wordpress-theme-twentyfifteen",
"binary_version": "4.4.2+dfsg-1ubuntu1"
},
{
"binary_name": "wordpress-theme-twentyfourteen",
"binary_version": "4.4.2+dfsg-1ubuntu1"
},
{
"binary_name": "wordpress-theme-twentysixteen",
"binary_version": "4.4.2+dfsg-1ubuntu1"
}
]
}
{
"binaries": [
{
"binary_name": "wordpress",
"binary_version": "4.9.5+dfsg1-1"
},
{
"binary_name": "wordpress-l10n",
"binary_version": "4.9.5+dfsg1-1"
},
{
"binary_name": "wordpress-theme-twentyfifteen",
"binary_version": "4.9.5+dfsg1-1"
},
{
"binary_name": "wordpress-theme-twentyseventeen",
"binary_version": "4.9.5+dfsg1-1"
},
{
"binary_name": "wordpress-theme-twentysixteen",
"binary_version": "4.9.5+dfsg1-1"
}
]
}