Comparison Overview
Dealertrack

Dealertrack
3400 New Hyde Park Rd, North Hills, 11042, US
Last Update: 11/03/2026
Dealertrack provides industry leading automotive retail software, including our award winning DMS and access to the largest lender network, that helps dealers, lenders, and OEMs simplify workflows, speed up transactions, and improve the car-buying experience. As a Cox A...

UKG
N/A
Last Update: 01/04/2026
UKG is the Workforce Operating Platform that puts workforce understanding to work. With the world's largest collection of workforce insights, and people-first AI, our ability to reveal unseen ways to build trust, amplify productivity, and empower talent, is unmatched. I...
Compliance Ranges Comparison

Dealertrack







UKG






Benchmark & Cyber Underwriting Signals
Incidents vs Software Development Industry Avg (This Year)
No incidents recorded for Dealertrack in 2026.
Incidents vs Software Development Industry Avg (This Year)
No incidents recorded for UKG in 2026.
Incident History - Dealertrack (X = Date, Y = Severity)
Dealertrack cyber incidents detection timeline including parent company and subsidiaries.
Incident History - UKG (X = Date, Y = Severity)
UKG cyber incidents detection timeline including parent company and subsidiaries.
Notable Incidents

Dealertrack

UKG
FAQ
Latest Global CVEs
PraisonAI before 1.5.115 contains a path traversal vulnerability in MultiAgentMonitor that fails to sanitize agent IDs when building file paths. Attackers can include traversal sequences like ../ in agent IDs to read, write, or overwrite arbitrary files, enabling sensitive disclosure, denial of service, or code execution.
PraisonAI before 1.5.115 contains an information disclosure vulnerability in the MultiAgentLedger component that allows attackers to access sensitive data by registering agents with duplicate IDs. Attackers can exploit the lack of agent ID uniqueness enforcement to share ledger instances and expose system prompts and conversation history between agents.
PraisonAI before 1.5.128 contains a cross-origin agent execution vulnerability in the AGUI endpoint that allows remote attackers to trigger arbitrary agent execution. The POST /agui endpoint lacks authentication and hardcodes Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * headers, combined with Starlette's Content-Type-agnostic JSON parsing, enabling attackers to bypass CORS preflight checks via simple requests and exfiltrate sensitive agent responses including tool execution results and environment data.
PraisonAI before 4.5.128 contains an arbitrary shell command execution vulnerability where the UI modules hardcode approval_mode to auto, overriding administrator configuration from PRAISON_APPROVAL_MODE environment variable. Authenticated attackers can instruct the LLM agent to execute arbitrary shell commands via subprocess.run with shell=True, bypassing the manual approval gate and insufficient command sanitization blocklists.
PraisonAI before 1.5.128 caches tool approval decisions by tool name only, not by invocation arguments, allowing subsequent execute_command calls to bypass approval prompts. Attackers can exploit this by obtaining initial approval for a benign command, then silently exfiltrate API keys and credentials via subsequent shell commands without user consent.