Comparison Overview
Green Valley Consulting Engineers

Green Valley Consulting Engineers
335 Tesconi Circle, Santa Rosa, California, 95401, US
Last Update: 16/01/2026
We are a civil engineering, construction management, construction inspection and land surveying firm, passionate about enriching and enhancing the communities in which we live, work, and play. Located in Santa Rosa, California, we were founded more than two decades ago ...

Mott MacDonald
10 Fleet Place, London, EC4M 7, GB
Last Update: 02/04/2026
We are an engineering, management and development consultancy and one of the largest wholly employee-owned firms of our kind. We plan, design, deliver and maintain the transport, energy, water, defence and security, and buildings infrastructure that is integral to peo...
Compliance Ranges Comparison

Green Valley Consulting Engineers







Mott MacDonald






Benchmark & Cyber Underwriting Signals
Incidents vs Civil Engineering Industry Avg (This Year)
No incidents recorded for Green Valley Consulting Engineers in 2026.
Incidents vs Civil Engineering Industry Avg (This Year)
No incidents recorded for Mott MacDonald in 2026.
Incident History - Green Valley Consulting Engineers (X = Date, Y = Severity)
Green Valley Consulting Engineers cyber incidents detection timeline including parent company and subsidiaries.
Incident History - Mott MacDonald (X = Date, Y = Severity)
Mott MacDonald cyber incidents detection timeline including parent company and subsidiaries.
Notable Incidents

Green Valley Consulting Engineers

Mott MacDonald
FAQ
Latest Global CVEs
phpMyFAQ before 4.1.5 contains a privilege escalation vulnerability in GroupController::updatePermissions that allows GROUP_EDIT administrators to grant arbitrary rights to groups without verifying they hold those rights themselves. A delegated administrator can exploit this by assigning high-value permissions to a group they belong to, inheriting those rights and escalating privileges up to full administrative control.
n8n before 2.25.7 and 2.26.x before 2.26.2 contains an abstract syntax tree (AST) security validator bypass in the Python Code node. An authenticated user with permission to create or modify workflows containing a Python Code node can bypass the validator and access the task executor module namespace. The issue only affects self-hosted instances where the Python Task Runner is enabled; where N8N_BLOCK_RUNNER_ENV_ACCESS is configured to allow it, this can disclose environment variables accessible to the task runner process.
Grav CMS before 2.0.0-beta.2 contains multiple code-execution vulnerabilities. Three unsafe unserialize() calls - in Scheduler\JobQueue, Framework\Cache\Adapter\FileCache, and Session - deserialize untrusted data without restricting allowed classes, enabling PHP object injection and, via a gadget chain, arbitrary code execution where an attacker controls the serialized input. Additionally, InstallCommand's git clone operation passes the branch, url, and path parameters into a shell command without escaping, allowing OS command injection via plugin/theme installation (which requires admin access). A Twig security blocklist bypass (server-side template injection) is also present. The issues are fixed in 2.0.0-beta.2.
Storage Concentrator (SC & SCVM) contains a command injection vulnerability within the debug.pl script that is reachable without authentication. A remote attacker can submit a specially crafted HTTP request containing a malicious payload that is processed without adequate input sanitization, resulting in arbitrary command execution with root-level privileges on the underlying system.
Storage Concentrator (SC & SCVM) contains a command injection vulnerability in the ms_service.pl service, which listens on TCP port 9000 by default and accepts custom network packets to perform device actions. An unauthenticated remote attacker can send a specially crafted packet containing a malicious payload that is processed without adequate sanitization, resulting in arbitrary command execution with root-level privileges.