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Unauthenticated access lets systems or services be used without verifying identity, increasing the risk of data exposure, tampering, or abuse.

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Background for this topic.

Unauthenticated describes a request, session, or service that has not verified the requester’s identity. This may be intentional for public content or health checks, but in security reporting the term often highlights an interface that can be reached without credentials, such as an administration panel, API, database, or device-management service. It does not by itself mean the requester is authorized to perform every action; authentication and authorization are separate controls.

Unauthenticated exposure matters when it permits sensitive data retrieval, configuration changes, or exploitation of a vulnerability without a prior login. Security teams should identify such interfaces during asset discovery and vulnerability management, confirm that public access is necessary, and enforce authentication and least-privilege authorization where it is not. Network restrictions, safe defaults, logging, and alerts for unexpected access help reduce exposure and support investigation when an unauthenticated endpoint is abused.

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Atlassian has warned of a critical security flaw in Confluence Data Center and Server that could result in "significant data loss if exploited by an unauthenticated attacker." Tracked as CVE-2023-22518, the vulnerability is rated 9.1 out of a maximum of 10 on the CVSS scoring system. It has been described as an instance of "improper authorization vulnerability." All versions of Confluence Data