
What is CVEs?
Security researchers and analysts can use this to pull CVE records on demand. It streamlines access to vulnerability data for ongoing projects.
Teams monitoring threats benefit from direct queries that return relevant details. This keeps focus on research rather than manual searches.
Prompts to try with CVEs
What you can use CVEs for
Quick CVE Lookup
Security analyst enters a specific CVE ID to retrieve description, severity, and affected products for immediate reference during incident response.
Software Vulnerability Review
Developer queries CVEs tied to a library or framework before integrating it into a project to assess potential risks.
Targeted Security Research
Researcher explores CVEs matching keywords like 'privilege escalation' in a given operating system to map threat landscapes.
How to use CVEs
- 1Open the CVEs GPT inside ChatGPT
- 2Enter a CVE ID, product name, or keyword
- 3Review the returned vulnerability details
- 4Ask follow-up questions to refine results
- 5Copy or note findings for your analysis
CVEs: pros & cons
Pros
- +Focused solely on CVE lookups
- +Enables fast security queries
- +No external tools required
- +Useful for known vulnerability checks
Cons
- –Limited to publicly known CVEs
- –May reflect training data cutoff
- –Requires ChatGPT account access
How to access: CVEs runs inside ChatGPT — click Open in ChatGPT to start (a ChatGPT account is required). It's been used in 1K+ conversations.
Frequently asked questions
It searches and retrieves information on Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures entries to support security analysis.
User reviews
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