Vulnerability Monitor

The vendors, products, and vulnerabilities you care about

lotus

About This Vendor

lotus is a technology vendor producing software and infrastructure products. As a software provider, lotus's broad product portfolio across multiple domains—including operating systems, cloud infrastructure, enterprise applications, databases, networking, and security tools—creates a large attack surface. Additionally, long support cycles, widespread deployment, and continuous feature development contribute to the accumulation of discovered vulnerabilities over time. Major vendors typically report higher CVE counts not necessarily due to inferior security, but because of greater exposure to security research, responsible disclosure practices, and the sheer complexity of maintaining multiple product lines and legacy systems. Regular security assessments and patching of lotus's products are critical for organizations running their software in production environments.

Vulnerability Trends for This Vendor

SecUtils has indexed 31 known vulnerabilities from lotus. This includes 10 high-severity issues requiring prompt remediation. These vulnerabilities affect 10 distinct products across lotus's portfolio, demonstrating the breadth of the vendor's product ecosystem and the importance of comprehensive patch management strategies. Disclosure dates span from 1999 through 2011, indicating decades of continuous security attention and research. Organizations deploying lotus products should maintain active vulnerability monitoring, prioritize critical patches, and implement compensating controls where patches cannot be applied immediately.

ID Date Published Last Modified Severity (CVSSv3) Severity (CVSSv2) Exploit Available
CVE-1999-1012 1999-05-04 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2000-0021 1999-12-01 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2000-0022 1999-12-21 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2000-0023 1999-12-21 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2000-0452 2000-05-18 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2000-1046 2000-12-11 2025-04-03 - 10.0 Likely
CVE-2000-1047 2000-12-11 2025-04-03 - 10.0 Likely
CVE-2001-0009 2001-02-12 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2001-1445 2001-03-01 2025-04-03 - 7.5 Likely
CVE-2001-0130 2001-03-12 2025-04-03 - 10.0 Likely
CVE-2001-0260 2001-06-02 2025-04-03 - 7.5 Likely
CVE-2001-1161 2001-07-02 2025-04-03 - 7.5 Likely
CVE-2001-0600 2001-08-02 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2001-0601 2001-08-02 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2001-0602 2001-08-02 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2001-0603 2001-08-02 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2001-0604 2001-08-02 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2000-1203 2001-08-20 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2001-1018 2001-09-20 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2001-0939 2001-11-30 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2001-0846 2001-12-06 2025-04-03 - 10.0 Likely
CVE-2001-0847 2001-12-06 2025-04-03 - 7.5 Likely
CVE-2001-0954 2001-12-07 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2002-0087 2002-03-15 2025-04-03 - 2.1 Unknown
CVE-2002-0245 2002-05-29 2025-04-03 - 7.5 Likely
CVE-2002-0407 2002-07-26 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2002-0408 2002-07-26 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2002-1010 2002-10-04 2025-04-03 - 7.5 Likely
CVE-2002-2191 2002-12-31 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2003-1408 2003-12-31 2025-04-03 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2011-0290 2011-10-21 2025-04-11 - 6.5 Likely

How SecUtils Normalizes Vendor Data

SecUtils aggregates National Vulnerability Database (NVD) and MITRE records for lotus by normalizing vendor identifiers across diverse data sources, mapping vendor names to their associated product lines, and collecting all known vulnerabilities under a unified vendor context. For every CVE associated with lotus's products, we extract and structure Common Platform Enumeration (CPE) data, Common Weakness Enumeration (CWE) categories, CVSS severity metrics, and reference links to enable rapid vulnerability identification and asset correlation. This record contains no exploit code, proof-of-concept instructions, or attack methodologies—only defensive intelligence necessary for patch management, risk assessment, and vendor vulnerability tracking.