Vulnerability Discussion
If a world-writable directory is not group-owned by root, sys, bin, or an application Group Identifier (GID), unauthorized users may be able to modify files created by others.
The only authorized public directories are the temporary directories supplied with the system or those designed to be temporary file repositories. The setting is normally reserved for directories used by the system and by users for temporary file storage, (e.g., /tmp), and for directories requiring global read/write access.
Check
The following command will discover and print world-writable directories that are not group-owned by a system account, given the assumption that only system accounts have a gid lower than 1000. Run it once for each local partition [PART]:
$ sudo find [PART] -xdev -type d -perm -0002 -gid +999 -print
If there is output, this is a finding.
Fix
Investigate any world-writable directories that are not group-owned by a system account and then delete the files or assign them to an appropriate group.