CINXE.COM

SecLists.Org Security Mailing List Archive

<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <script async src="/site.js"></script> <title>SecLists.Org Security Mailing List Archive</title> <meta name="description" content="Security mailing list archive for the Nmap lists, Bugtraq, Full Disclosure, Security Basics, Pen-test, and dozens more. Search capabilities and RSS feeds with smart excerpts are available"> <META name="keywords" content="Security,Mailing Lists,nmap-dev,nmap-hackers,Bugtraq,Full Disclosure,Security Basics,Penetration Testing,Info Security News,Firewall Wizards,IDS Focus,Web App Security,Daily Dave,Honepots,MS Sec Notification,Funsec,CERT Advisories,Open Source Security,NANOG,Interesting People,RISKS,Metasploit,Wireshark,Snort"> <link rel="canonical" href="https://seclists.org/"> <script type="application/ld+json">{ "@context": "http://schema.org", "@type": "WebSite", "url": "https://seclists.org/", "image": "https://seclists.org/images/sitelogo.png", "potentialAction": { "@type": "SearchAction", "target": { "@type": "EntryPoint", "urlTemplate": "https://seclists.org/search.html?q={term}" }, "query-input": "required name=term" }}</script> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width,initial-scale=1"> <meta name="theme-color" content="#2A0D45"> <link rel="preload" as="image" href="/images/sitelogo.png" imagesizes="168px" imagesrcset="/images/sitelogo.png, /images/sitelogo-2x.png 2x"> <link rel="preload" as="image" href="/shared/images/nst-icons.svg"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="/shared/css/nst.css?v=2"> <script async src="/shared/js/nst.js?v=2"></script> <link rel="stylesheet" href="/shared/css/nst-foot.css?v=2" media="print" onload="this.media='all'"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="/site.css"> <!--Google Analytics Code--> <link rel="preload" href="https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js" as="script"> <script> (function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','//www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-11009417-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); </script> <!--END Google Analytics Code--> <META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="NOARCHIVE"> <link rel="shortcut icon" href="/shared/images/tiny-eyeicon.png" type="image/png"> </head> <body><div id="nst-wrapper"> <div id="menu"> <div class="blur"> <header id="nst-head"> <a id="menu-open" href="#menu" aria-label="Open menu"> <img width="44" height="44" alt="" aria-hidden="true" src="/shared/images/nst-icons.svg#menu"> </a> <a id="menu-close" href="#" aria-label="Close menu"> <img width="44" height="44" alt="" aria-hidden="true" src="/shared/images/nst-icons.svg#close"> </a> <a id="nst-logo" href="/" aria-label="Home page"> <img alt="Home page logo" srcset="/images/sitelogo.png, /images/sitelogo-2x.png 2x" src="/images/sitelogo.png" onerror="this.onerror=null;this.srcset=this.src" height=90 width=168></a> <nav id="nst-gnav"> <a class="nlink" href="https://nmap.org/">Nmap.org</a> <a class="nlink" href="https://npcap.com/">Npcap.com</a> <a class="nlink" href="https://seclists.org/">Seclists.org</a> <a class="nlink" href="https://sectools.org">Sectools.org</a> <a class="nlink" href="https://insecure.org/">Insecure.org</a> </nav> <form class="nst-search" id="nst-head-search" action="/search/"> <input class="nst-search-q" name="q" type="search" placeholder="Site Search"> <button class="nst-search-button" title="Search"> <img style="width:100%;aspect-ratio:1/1;" alt="" aria-hidden="true" src="/shared/images/nst-icons.svg#search"> </button> </form> </header> </div> </div> <main id="nst-content"> <h1 class="l-title">SecLists.Org Security Mailing List Archive</h1> <p>Any hacker will tell you that the latest news and exploits are not found on any web site&mdash;not even <a href="https://insecure.org">Insecure.Org</a>. No, the cutting edge in security research is and will continue to be the full disclosure mailing lists such as Bugtraq. Here we provide web archives and RSS feeds (now including message extracts), updated in real-time, for many of our favorite lists. Browse the individual lists below, or search them all using the Site Search box above. <h2 id="inseclists" class="purpleheader">Insecure.Org Lists</h2><div id="nmap-dev" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/nmap-dev/"><img src="/images/nmap-dev-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="nmap-dev logo"></a><p><b><a href="/nmap-dev/">Nmap Development</a></b> &mdash; Unmoderated technical development forum for debating ideas, patches, and suggestions regarding proposed changes to <a href="https://nmap.org">Nmap</A> and related projects. <a href="https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev">Subscribe to nmap-dev here</a>.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/nmap-dev/2025/q1/index.html"><img src="/images/current-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Current period icon">Current Quarter</a> <li><a href="/nmap-dev/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/nmap-dev.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> <li><a class="showbutton" href="/nmap-dev/"><span class="show-id">nmap-dev</span>Latest Posts</a></ul> <blockquote id="latest-nmap-dev" class="latest"> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/13">Windows 10/11: Ncat: A message sent on a datagram socket was larger than the internal message buffer ...</a></strong> <em>Ken Kayser (Feb 20)</em><br> *Describe the bug*<br> When listening to a port with ncat, as soon as a UDP packet is received, I<br> receive a constant stream of errors with the following text: &quot;Ncat: A<br> message sent on a datagram socket was larger than the internal message<br> buffer or some other network limit, or the buffer used to receive a<br> datagram into was smaller than the datagram itself. .&quot;<br> <br> *To Reproduce*<br> <br> 1. In either a Windows command line or Powershell I enter...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/12">Reverse DNS (issue #3007)</a></strong> <em>Matteo Nicoli (Feb 13)</em><br> Hi all,<br> <br> I noticed a cool feature proposal on GitHub (issue 3007 &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/nmap/nmap/issues/3007">https://github.com/nmap/nmap/issues/3007</a>&gt;). It basically <br> suggests a new feature for returning the (complete) list of DNS records obtained — through reverse DNS lookups — from <br> an IP address. If it matches with the map product roadmap, I’d like to start implementing it. Is there some maintainer <br> who could give me a brief feedback about it?<br> <br> Cheers,<br> Matteo<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/11">Re: Mail stoppage</a></strong> <em>Gordon Fyodor Lyon (Feb 12)</em><br> Yes, this was my fault. Mail to the Nmap dev list from non-subscribers<br> goes through moderation to keep out the spam. I regularly go through the<br> moderation queue to find and approve the &quot;real&quot; messages, but I was a bit<br> slow this time. We strongly recommend that folks posting to the list first<br> subscribe to it. This avoids the moderation delay and prevents them from<br> missing any responses which might only be sent to the list.<br> <br> Cheers,...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/10">Mail stoppage</a></strong> <em>Dave Close (Feb 12)</em><br> Several messages received today seem to have been stuck on nmap.org for<br> up to a month. Example (edited for clarity):<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/9">Version: 7.94+SVN TypeError: Couldn&apos;t find foreign struct converter for &apos;cairo.Context&apos;</a></strong> <em>Hendrick Halim (Feb 12)</em><br> Version: 7.94+SVN<br> TypeError: Couldn&apos;t find foreign struct converter for &apos;cairo.Context&apos;<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/8">topology tab crash</a></strong> <em>Genny and Doug Kent (Feb 12)</em><br> zenmap crashes when topology tab clicked.<br> <br> Output message below<br> <br> Version: 7.94+SVN<br> TypeError: Couldn&apos;t find foreign struct converter for &apos;cairo.Context&apos;<br> <br> Doug Kent<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/7">PR #2954, Fix out of bounds reads in packet parsing</a></strong> <em>Domen Puncer Kugler via dev (Feb 12)</em><br> Hi,<br> <br> I&apos;ve submitted a pull request a few months ago:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2954">https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2954</a><br> <br> The PR includes following three commits:<br> - Fix out of bounds read in HopByHopHeader::validate<br> - Fix out of bounds read in PacketParser::split<br> - Add AFL test code for PacketParser<br> <br> This was found as a part of a short Hackathon at NCC Group.<br> As far as I can tell, there is no security impact, but it would still be nice <br> to see this fixed.<br> <br> Kind regards<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/6">High-Priority HTML Parsing script</a></strong> <em>astrotoki via dev (Feb 12)</em><br> Hello,<br> <br> I noticed that under the high priority script ideas was the need for a library that parses HTML info from sites. I <br> wrote a script that uses a web crawler and extracts html info from attached pages and accompanying urls within the html <br> body. Let me know if this is what yall were after?<br> <br> Thanks!<br> Ryan LaPierre &lt;Astro&gt;_______________________________________________<br> Sent through the dev mailing list...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/5">URL Pathfinder</a></strong> <em>astrotoki via dev (Feb 12)</em><br> Hello all!<br> <br> I just wrote up another script, trying to practice and maybe have some added to the master list for nmap. This script <br> enumerates possible hidden path extensions on urls. As always, Id love input on it, changes or updates.<br> <br> Thanks all!<br> Ryan LaPierre &lt;Astro&gt;_______________________________________________<br> Sent through the dev mailing list<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev">https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev</a><br> Archived at <a rel="nofollow" href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/">https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/4">Null Byte Poisoning NSE</a></strong> <em>astrotoki via dev (Feb 12)</em><br> Here is my submission of a script I wrote that should test a site for null byte poisoning vulnerabilities._______________________________________________<br> Sent through the dev mailing list<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev">https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev</a><br> Archived at <a rel="nofollow" href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/">https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/3">Re: First Go</a></strong> <em>astrotoki via dev (Feb 12)</em><br> Here is an updated version with more XSS patterns integrated into it. As well as some clean up!<br> <br> I also created a separate .lua with just the http crawler function.<br> <br> Sent through the dev mailing list<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev">https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev</a><br> Archived at <a rel="nofollow" href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/">https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/2">First Go</a></strong> <em>astrotoki via dev (Feb 12)</em><br> Hello!,<br> <br> I just started learning Lua for writing NSEs and had a go at a HTTP crawler that identifies XSS vulnerabilities on <br> sites. I used Juice-Shop OWASP to confirm it works. (Thats why the source code uses port 3000 in addition to 80) Id <br> love feedback! Doing my best to learn as much as I can. I attached the http_xss_crawler.nse below!<br> <br> PS. I had used ChatGPTo1 and Github CoPilot to aid in debugging and syntax issues. The overall code is my...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/1">Re: [PATCH] nping: bind to interface on Linux for IPv4 send-ip</a></strong> <em>Daniel Miller (Feb 10)</em><br> Thanks, Valdik! I reviewed the code and moved the call to<br> socket_bindtodevice() to ProbeMode::start() so that it will affect all<br> modes, not just TCP. The change is in r39078.<br> <br> Dan<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2025/q1/0">High-Priority HTML Parsing script</a></strong> <em>astrotoki via dev (Jan 28)</em><br> Sent through the dev mailing list<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev">https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev</a><br> Archived at <a rel="nofollow" href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/">https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/</a><br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q4/8">Post Quantum hackathon and nmap</a></strong> <em>Loganaden Velvindron (Dec 09)</em><br> Hi Folks,<br> <br> I&apos;m logan from the cyberstorm.mu team. We have opened several PRs for<br> nmap to improve support for Post Quantum algorithms:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2977">https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2977</a><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2978">https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2978</a><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2987">https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2987</a><br> <br> We are working on other PRs for PQ which we will send in due time.<br> Feedback is welcome and we are willing to commit time to improve our<br> PRs.<br> <br> Kind regards,<br> Logan<br> (On behalf of the...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> </blockquote> </div> <div id="nmap-announce" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/nmap-announce/"><img src="/images/nmap-announce-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="nmap-announce logo"></a><p><b><a href="/nmap-announce/">Nmap Announce</a></b> &mdash; Moderated list for the most important new releases and announcements regarding the <a href="https://nmap.org">Nmap Security Scanner</a> and related projects. We recommend that all Nmap users <a href="https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/announce">subscribe to stay informed</a>.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/nmap-announce/2024/index.html"><img src="/images/current-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Current period icon">Previous Year</a> <li><a href="/nmap-announce/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/nmap-announce.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/announce"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> <li><a class="showbutton" href="/nmap-announce/"><span class="show-id">nmap-announce</span>Latest Posts</a></ul> <blockquote id="latest-nmap-announce" class="latest"> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-announce/2024/0">Nmap 7.95 released: OS and service detection signatures galore!</a></strong> <em>Gordon Fyodor Lyon (May 05)</em><br> Dear Nmap Community,<br> <br> I just arrived in San Francisco for the RSA conference and am delighted to<br> announce our Nmap Version 7.95 release! I&apos;m most excited that we finally<br> tackled our backlog of OS and service detection fingerprint submissions.<br> We&apos;re not talking about dozens or hundreds of them-we processed more than<br> 6,500 fingerprints!<br> <br> For OS detection, we added 336 signatures, bringing the new total to 6,036.<br> Additions include iOS 15...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-announce/2023/1">Npcap Celebrates its 10th Anniversary In Space!</a></strong> <em>Gordon Fyodor Lyon (Oct 05)</em><br> Dear Nmap community,<br> <br> Last month we celebrated Nmap&apos;s 26th birthday and today I&apos;m happy to share<br> another big milestone: Our Npcap driver for capturing and sending raw<br> packets on Windows turned 10 this year! From humble beginnings as a<br> security and modernization patch for the discontinued WinPcap project,<br> Npcap has become an indispensable component for both Nmap and Wireshark.<br> And it&apos;s used by hundreds of other software products and...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-announce/2023/0">Nmap 26th Birthday Announcement: Version 7.94</a></strong> <em>Gordon Fyodor Lyon (Sep 01)</em><br> Dear Nmap community,<br> <br> Today is Nmap’s 26th birthday, which reminded me that I hadn’t yet<br> announced our Nmap 7.94 release from May. And it’s a great one! The biggest<br> improvement was the Zenmap and Ndiff upgrades from the obsolete Python 2<br> language to Python 3 on all platforms. Big thanks to Daniel Miller, Jakub<br> Kulík, Brian Quigley, Sam James, Eli Schwartz, Romain Leonard, Varunram<br> Ganesh, Pavel Zhukov, Carey Balboa, and Hasan Aliyev for...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> </blockquote> </div> <div id="fulldisclosure" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/fulldisclosure/"><img src="/images/fulldisclosure-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="fulldisclosure logo"></a><p><b><a href="/fulldisclosure/">Full Disclosure</a></b> &mdash; A public, vendor-neutral forum for detailed discussion of vulnerabilities and exploitation techniques, as well as tools, papers, news, and events of interest to the community. The relaxed atmosphere of this quirky list provides some comic relief and certain industry gossip. More importantly, fresh vulnerabilities sometimes hit this list many hours or days before they pass through the Bugtraq moderation queue.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/index.html"><img src="/images/current-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Current period icon">Current Month</a> <li><a href="/fulldisclosure/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/fulldisclosure.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/fulldisclosure"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> <li><a class="showbutton" href="/fulldisclosure/"><span class="show-id">fulldisclosure</span>Latest Posts</a></ul> <blockquote id="latest-fulldisclosure" class="latest"> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/17">MitM attack against OpenSSH&apos;s VerifyHostKeyDNS-enabled client</a></strong> <em>Qualys Security Advisory via Fulldisclosure (Feb 20)</em><br> Qualys Security Advisory<br> <br> CVE-2025-26465: MitM attack against OpenSSH&apos;s VerifyHostKeyDNS-enabled<br> client<br> <br> CVE-2025-26466: DoS attack against OpenSSH&apos;s client and server<br> <br> ========================================================================<br> Contents<br> ========================================================================<br> <br> Summary<br> Background<br> Experiments<br> Results<br> MitM attack against OpenSSH&apos;s VerifyHostKeyDNS-enabled client<br> DoS...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/16">Self Stored XSS - acp2sev7.2.2</a></strong> <em>Andrey Stoykov (Feb 20)</em><br> # Exploit Title: Self Stored XSS - acp2sev7.2.2<br> # Date: 02/2025<br> # Exploit Author: Andrey Stoykov<br> # Version: 7.2.2<br> # Tested on: Ubuntu 22.04<br> # Blog:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://msecureltd.blogspot.com/2025/02/friday-fun-pentest-series-19-self.html">https://msecureltd.blogspot.com/2025/02/friday-fun-pentest-series-19-self.html</a><br> <br> Self Stored XSS #1:<br> <br> Steps to Reproduce:<br> <br> 1. Visit &quot;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://192.168.58.168/acp2se/mul/muladmin.php&quot">http://192.168.58.168/acp2se/mul/muladmin.php&quot</a>; and login with<br> &quot;admin&quot; / &quot;adminpass&quot;<br> 2. In the field &quot;Put the name of the new...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/15">Python&apos;s official documentation contains textbook example of insecure code (XSS)</a></strong> <em>Georgi Guninski (Feb 20)</em><br> Python&apos;s official documentation contains textbook example of insecure code (XSS)<br> <br> Date: 2025-02-18<br> Author: Georgi Guninski<br> <br> ===<br> form = cgi.FieldStorage()<br> if &quot;name&quot; not in form or &quot;addr&quot; not in form:<br> print(&quot;&lt;H1&gt;Error&lt;/H1&gt;&quot;)<br> print(&quot;Please fill in the name and addr fields.&quot;)<br> return<br> print(&quot;&lt;p&gt;name:&quot;, form[&quot;name&quot;].value)<br> print(&quot;&lt;p&gt;addr:&quot;,...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/14">Re: Netgear Router Administrative Web Interface Lacks Transport Encryption By Default</a></strong> <em>Gynvael Coldwind (Feb 17)</em><br> Hi,<br> <br> This isn&apos;t really a problem a vendor can solve in firmware (apart from<br> offering configuration via cloud, which has its own issues).<br> Even if they would enable TLS/SSL by default, it would just give one a<br> false sense of security, since:<br> - the certificates would be invalid (public CAs don&apos;t give out certs for IP<br> addresses),<br> - they would be easy to clone (due to being self-signed and/or being easy<br> to extract from a similar device),<br> -...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/13">Monero 18.3.4 zero-day DoS vulnerability has been dropped publicly on social network.</a></strong> <em>upper.underflow via Fulldisclosure (Feb 16)</em><br> Hello,<br> <br> About an hour ago, a group appearing to be named WyRCV2 posted a note on the nostr social network, which can be found <br> at the following link: <a rel="nofollow" href="https://primal.net/e/note1vzh0mj9rcxax9cgcdapupyxeehjprd68gd9kk9wrv939m8knulrs4780x7">https://primal.net/e/note1vzh0mj9rcxax9cgcdapupyxeehjprd68gd9kk9wrv939m8knulrs4780x7</a><br> <br> Save, share, use.<br> <br> The paste link includes a list of nodes that the attacker has instructed to target, along with a Python code to <br> leverage the attack. According to their explanation, this vulnerability is...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/12">Netgear Router Administrative Web Interface Lacks Transport Encryption By Default</a></strong> <em>Ryan Delaney via Fulldisclosure (Feb 16)</em><br> &lt;!--<br> # Exploit Title: Netgear Router Administrative Web Interface Lacks<br> Transport Encryption By Default<br> # Date: 02-13-2025<br> # Exploit Author: Ryan Delaney<br> # Author Contact: ryan.delaney () owasp org<br> # Vendor Homepage: <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.netgear.com">https://www.netgear.com</a><br> # Version: Netgear C7800 Router, F/W 6.01.07, possibly others<br> # Tested on: Netgear C7800 Router, F/W 6.01.07<br> # CVE: CVE-2022-41545<br> <br> The administrative web interface of a Netgear C7800 Router running...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/11">[CVE-2024-54756] GZDoom &lt;= 4.13.1 Arbitrary Code Execution via Malicious ZScript</a></strong> <em>Gabriel Valachi via Fulldisclosure (Feb 15)</em><br> In GZDoom 4.13.1 and below, there is a vulnerability involving array sizes in ZScript, the game engine&apos;s primary <br> scripting language. It is possible to dynamically allocate an array of 1073741823 dwords, permitting access to the rest <br> of the heap from the start of the array and causing a second array declared in the same function to overlap with this <br> huge array. The result is an exploit chain that allows arbitrary code execution through a...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/10">Re: Text injection on https://www.google.com/sorry/index via ?q parameter (no XSS)</a></strong> <em>David Fifield (Feb 15)</em><br> Today at about 2025-02-13 19:00 I noticed the &quot;≠&quot; is back, but now the<br> type 0x12 payload of the ?q query parameter gets formatted into the<br> string representation of an IP address, rather than being copied almost<br> verbatim into the page. If the payload length is 4 bytes, it gets<br> formatted as an IPv4 address; if 16 bytes, as an IPv6 address. I didn&apos;t<br> try a ton of experiments, but it looks like payload lengths other than 4<br> and 16...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/9">SEC Consult SA-20250211-0 :: Multiple vulnerabilities in Wattsense Bridge</a></strong> <em>SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab via Fulldisclosure (Feb 12)</em><br> SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory &lt; 20250211-0 &gt;<br> =======================================================================<br> title: Multiple vulnerabilities<br> product: Wattsense - Wattsense Bridge<br> vulnerable version: Wattsense Bridge<br> * Hardware Revision: WSG-EU-SC-14-00, 20230801<br> * Firmware Revision: Wattsense (Wattsense minimal)...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/8">APPLE-SA-02-10-2025-2 iPadOS 17.7.5</a></strong> <em>Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure (Feb 10)</em><br> APPLE-SA-02-10-2025-2 iPadOS 17.7.5<br> <br> iPadOS 17.7.5 addresses the following issues.<br> Information about the security content is also available at<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.apple.com/122173">https://support.apple.com/122173</a>.<br> <br> Apple maintains a Security Releases page at<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.apple.com/100100">https://support.apple.com/100100</a> which lists recent<br> software updates with security advisories.<br> <br> Accessibility<br> Available for: iPad Pro 12.9-inch 2nd generation, iPad Pro 10.5-inch,<br> and iPad 6th generation<br> Impact: A physical...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/7">APPLE-SA-02-10-2025-1 iOS 18.3.1 and iPadOS 18.3.1</a></strong> <em>Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure (Feb 10)</em><br> APPLE-SA-02-10-2025-1 iOS 18.3.1 and iPadOS 18.3.1<br> <br> iOS 18.3.1 and iPadOS 18.3.1 addresses the following issues.<br> Information about the security content is also available at<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.apple.com/122174">https://support.apple.com/122174</a>.<br> <br> Apple maintains a Security Releases page at<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.apple.com/100100">https://support.apple.com/100100</a> which lists recent<br> software updates with security advisories.<br> <br> Accessibility<br> Available for: iPhone XS and later, iPad Pro 13-inch, iPad Pro 12.9-inch<br> 3rd generation...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/6">CVE-2024-55447: Access Control in Paxton Net2 software (update)</a></strong> <em>Jeroen Hermans via Fulldisclosure (Feb 10)</em><br> CloudAware Security Advisory<br> <br> CVE-2024-55447: Potential PII leak and incorrect access control in <br> Paxton Net2 software<br> <br> ========================================================================<br> Summary<br> ========================================================================<br> Insecure backend database in the Paxton Net2 software.<br> Possible leaking of PII incorrect access control.<br> Access cards can be cloned without physical access to the original...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/5">ChatGPT AI finds &quot;security concern&quot; (XSS) in DeepSeek&apos;s code</a></strong> <em>Georgi Guninski (Feb 10)</em><br> Summary: On 2025-02-09 ChatGPT AI found &quot;security concern&quot; (XSS) in<br> DeepSeek&apos;s AI python code.<br> <br> Background:<br> <br> Consider the simple coding question (Q):<br> <br> Write Python CGI which takes as an argument NAME and outputs: &quot;Hello NAME&quot;.<br> <br> First page and results on google for &quot;python CGI&quot; return for me<br> tutorials, which are flawed and textbook examples of the cross site<br> scripting (XSS) vulnerability. This is a...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/4">KL-001-2025-002: Checkmk NagVis Remote Code Execution</a></strong> <em>KoreLogic Disclosures via Fulldisclosure (Feb 04)</em><br> KL-001-2025-002: Checkmk NagVis Remote Code Execution<br> <br> Title: Checkmk NagVis Remote Code Execution<br> Advisory ID: KL-001-2025-002<br> Publication Date: 2025-02-04<br> Publication URL: <a rel="nofollow" href="https://korelogic.com/Resources/Advisories/KL-001-2025-002.txt">https://korelogic.com/Resources/Advisories/KL-001-2025-002.txt</a><br> <br> 1. Vulnerability Details<br> <br>      Affected Vendor: Checkmk<br>      Affected Product: Checkmk/NagVis<br>      Affected Version: Checkmk 2.3.0p2, NagVis 1.9.40<br>      Platform: GNU/Linux<br>      CWE...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2025/Feb/3">KL-001-2025-001: Checkmk NagVis Reflected Cross-site Scripting</a></strong> <em>KoreLogic Disclosures via Fulldisclosure (Feb 04)</em><br> KL-001-2025-001: Checkmk NagVis Reflected Cross-site Scripting<br> <br> Title: Checkmk NagVis Reflected Cross-site Scripting<br> Advisory ID: KL-001-2025-001<br> Publication Date: 2025-02-04<br> Publication URL: <a rel="nofollow" href="https://korelogic.com/Resources/Advisories/KL-001-2025-001.txt">https://korelogic.com/Resources/Advisories/KL-001-2025-001.txt</a><br> <br> 1. Vulnerability Details<br> <br>      Affected Vendor: Checkmk<br>      Affected Product: Checkmk/NagVis<br>      Affected Version: Checkmk 2.3.0p2, NagVis 1.9.40<br>      Platform: GNU/Linux...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> </blockquote> </div> <h2 id="other" class="purpleheader">Other Excellent Security Lists</h2><div id="bugtraq" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/bugtraq/"><img src="/images/bugtraq-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="bugtraq logo"></a><p><b><a href="/bugtraq/">Bugtraq</a></b> &mdash; The premier general security mailing list. Vulnerabilities are often announced here first, so check frequently!<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/bugtraq/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/bugtraq.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/1/description"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="basics" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/basics/"><img src="/images/basics-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="basics logo"></a><p><b><a href="/basics/">Security Basics</a></b> &mdash; A high-volume list which permits people to ask "stupid questions" without being derided as "n00bs". I recommend this list to network security newbies, but be sure to read Bugtraq and other lists as well.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/basics/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/basics.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/105/description"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="pen-test" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/pen-test/"><img src="/images/pen-test-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="pen-test logo"></a><p><b><a href="/pen-test/">Penetration Testing</a></b> &mdash; While this list is intended for "professionals", participants frequenly disclose techniques and strategies that would be useful to anyone with a practical interest in security and network auditing.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/pen-test/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/pen-test.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/101/description"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="isn" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/isn/"><img src="/images/isn-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="isn logo"></a><p><b><a href="/isn/">Info Security News</a></b> &mdash; Carries news items (generally from mainstream sources) that relate to security.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/isn/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/isn.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.infosecnews.org/"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="firewall-wizards" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/firewall-wizards/"><img src="/images/firewall-wizards-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="firewall-wizards logo"></a><p><b><a href="/firewall-wizards/">Firewall Wizards</a></b> &mdash; Tips and tricks for firewall administrators<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/firewall-wizards/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/firewall-wizards.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="https://listserv.icsalabs.com/mailman/listinfo/firewall-wizards"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="focus-ids" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/focus-ids/"><img src="/images/focus-ids-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="focus-ids logo"></a><p><b><a href="/focus-ids/">IDS Focus</a></b> &mdash; Technical discussion about Intrusion Detection Systems. You can also read the archives of a <a href="https://seclists.org/ids/">previous IDS list</a><ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/focus-ids/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/focus-ids.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/96/description"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="webappsec" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/webappsec/"><img src="/images/webappsec-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="webappsec logo"></a><p><b><a href="/webappsec/">Web App Security</a></b> &mdash; Provides insights on the unique challenges which make web applications notoriously hard to secure, as well as attack methods including SQL injection, cross-site scripting (XSS), cross-site request forgery, and more.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/webappsec/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/webappsec.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/107/description"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="dailydave" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/dailydave/"><img src="/images/dailydave-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="dailydave logo"></a><p><b><a href="/dailydave/">Daily Dave</a></b> &mdash; This technical discussion list covers vulnerability research, exploit development, and security events/gossip. It was started by <a href="http://www.immunitysec.com/">ImmunitySec</a> founder Dave Aitel and many security luminaries participate. Many posts simply advertise Immunity products, but you can't really fault Dave for being self-promotional on a list named DailyDave.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/dailydave/2025/q1/index.html"><img src="/images/current-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Current period icon">Current Quarter</a> <li><a href="/dailydave/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/dailydave.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="https://lists.immunityinc.com/mailman/listinfo/dailydave"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> <li><a class="showbutton" href="/dailydave/"><span class="show-id">dailydave</span>Latest Posts</a></ul> <blockquote id="latest-dailydave" class="latest"> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2025/q1/6">on your child going to college in Christchurch, NZ and velvet worms</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Feb 11)</em><br> *on your child going to college in Christchurch, NZ and velvet worms*<br> <br> By mid‑August the garden already practices absence — stems turning hollow,<br> the robin leaving its notes hanging in the air like torn corners of a song.<br> Under the chirp of palmetto bugs, a log eases itself back into earth.<br> Inside, hidden from the light, a velvet worm does the impossible: offers<br> herself to a spill of pale, blind threads. For days she is nothing but<br> hunger...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2025/q1/5">Re: (the root of the root and the bud of the bud)</a></strong> <em>Sean Heelan via Dailydave (Jan 13)</em><br> As it happens, I’ve found the most effective way to use LLMs is to de-anthropomorphise them entirely and treat them <br> very like fuzzers (large scale generation of results, lots of false positives/nonsense, filtered by some oracle).<br> <br> The “conversation with an AI” approach where you imagine yourself as having a single artificial brain to interact with <br> is (currently at least) practically far less useful than one in which you are content with...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2025/q1/4">Anthropological &quot;Hacker&quot; Map</a></strong> <em>A K via Dailydave (Jan 13)</em><br> Hi all,<br> <br> In the latest &quot;Security Weekly&quot; (<a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXefYdEGW04">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXefYdEGW04</a><br> )<br> they present the Anthropological &quot;Hacker&quot; Map<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://wherewarlocksstayuplate.com/map/">https://wherewarlocksstayuplate.com/map/</a><br> <br> While the map is incomplete (how can it ever be complete?), I think it is<br> one of the few times, outside of David Aitel&apos;s writings about the cross-cut<br> between the &quot;underground&quot; (for a lack of a better term) and subsequent<br> commercial...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2025/q1/3">Re: (the root of the root and the bud of the bud)</a></strong> <em>Don A. Bailey via Dailydave (Jan 12)</em><br> I designed one of the first working fuzzers (albeit unintentionally) back<br> in the late 90&apos;s. I don&apos;t remember if I published it, but I still have the<br> code. It, however, worked - badly - but it worked. I was heavily flamed,<br> however, because as you stated - it was not hip. It only attacked<br> environment variable and command-line argument based vulnerabilities. But,<br> in the 90&apos;s and early 00&apos;s, we had no shortage of local suid-based...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2025/q1/2">Re: (the root of the root and the bud of the bud)</a></strong> <em>Thomas Dullien via Dailydave (Jan 12)</em><br> Hey,<br> <br> I have one quibble: We are using &quot;reasoning&quot; in a qualitative, not<br> descriptive, form here -- &quot;fuzzing is or is not reasoning&quot;, &quot;LLMs reason or<br> do not reason&quot;. I am not sure this is helpful. Fuzzing is empirically<br> successful at finding crashes. Somebody that needs to light a fire and<br> smashes two stones together until they throw sparks does not, once the fire<br> burns, need to justify that &apos;stones perform...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2025/q1/1">Re: (the root of the root and the bud of the bud)</a></strong> <em>Darren Bounds via Dailydave (Jan 12)</em><br> Everything old is new and the way we reason is the same way LLMs reason. It&apos;s<br> not about looking for the same problem the same way it&apos;s about going to <br> searching for that flaw the same way with unlimited (nearly) resources.<br> <br> Traditional human-led vulnerability research and discovery is, today, a short<br> lived venture.<br> <br> Things will change very rapidly over the coming 24 months. <br> <br> Memories and thoughts are the same thing, someone tried to...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2025/q1/0">(the root of the root and the bud of the bud)</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Jan 11)</em><br> Memories and thoughts are the same thing, someone tried to explain to me<br> recently. You have to think to remember, in other words. This is hard to<br> grasp for a lot of people because they *think *they have *memories*. They<br> wrongly think memory is a noun instead of a verb, which is ok in philosophy<br> and psychology but in cutting edge computer science we have to be precise<br> about these sorts of things.<br> <br> Twenty-five years ago, when I first started...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q4/3">the endless stream</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Dec 31)</em><br> I&apos;ve seen great people in our industry crushed under the weight of the<br> secrets they carry into a singularity from which no information can emerge.<br> In some ways the lesson from apache_nosejob.c<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.exploit-db.com/exploits/21560">https://www.exploit-db.com/exploits/21560</a>&gt; was that we cannot take<br> ourselves seriously, that at the heart of our discipline there must remain<br> a jester, that we must float upon the stream of endless information rather<br> than absorb it into our...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q4/2">Hacking the Edges of Knowledge: LLMs, Vulnerabilities, and the Quest for Understanding</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Nov 02)</em><br> [image: image.png]<br> <br> It&apos;s impossible not to notice that we live in an age of technological<br> wonders, stretching back to the primitive hominids who dared to ask &quot;Why?&quot;<br> but also continually accelerating and pulling everything apart while it<br> does, in the exact same manner as the Universe at large. It is why all the<br> hackers you know are invested so heavily in Deep Learning right now, as if<br> someone got on a megaphone at Chaos...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q4/1">Old Infosec Talks: Metlstorm&apos;s Take on Hacky Hacking</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Oct 31)</em><br> The Anatomy of Compromise<br> <br> One of my demented hobbies is watching old infosec talks and then seeing<br> how well they hold up to modern times. Recently I excavated Metlstorm&apos;s<br> 2017 BSides Canberra<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjgvP9UB9GI&amp;list=TLGGvAY1CcIr-AcyNjEwMjAyNA">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjgvP9UB9GI&amp;list=TLGGvAY1CcIr-AcyNjEwMjAyNA</a>&gt;<br> talk on &quot;How people get hacked&quot; - a pretty generic topic that gives a lot<br> of room for opinion, and one a lot of people have opined on, but the talk<br> itself...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q4/0">Grace Hopper and the Rebirth of US Conferences</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Oct 10)</em><br> I spent some time watching all the Grace Hopper videos on the youtubes, as<br> I prepared for what up North is a horrible storm, but here in Miami is, so<br> far, a breezy and clear day. You can hear her talk about how subroutines<br> used to be literal handwritten pages of instructions in notebooks. When you<br> wanted SIN or COS you would go over to whoever had the notebook with the<br> working version, and copy it out into your code.<br> <br> It was this experience that...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> </blockquote> </div> <div id="pauldotcom" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/pauldotcom/"><img src="/images/pauldotcom-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="pauldotcom logo"></a><p><b><a href="/pauldotcom/">PaulDotCom</a></b> &mdash; General discussion of security news, research, vulnerabilities, and the PaulDotCom Security Weekly podcast.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/pauldotcom/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/pauldotcom.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://mail.pauldotcom.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pauldotcom"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="honeypots" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/honeypots/"><img src="/images/honeypots-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="honeypots logo"></a><p><b><a href="/honeypots/">Honeypots</a></b> &mdash; Discussions about tracking attackers by setting up decoy honeypots or entire <a href="http://www.honeynet.org">honeynet</a> networks.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/honeypots/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/honeypots.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/119/description"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="microsoft" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/microsoft/"><img src="/images/microsoft-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="microsoft logo"></a><p><b><a href="/microsoft/">Microsoft Sec Notification</a></b> &mdash; Beware that MS often uses these security bulletins as marketing propaganda to downplay serious vulnerabilities in their products&mdash;note how most have a prominent and often-misleading "mitigating factors" section.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/microsoft/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/microsoft.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/notify.mspx"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="funsec" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/funsec/"><img src="/images/funsec-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="funsec logo"></a><p><b><a href="/funsec/">Funsec</a></b> &mdash; While most security lists ban off-topic discussion, Funsec is a haven for free community discussion and enjoyment of the lighter, more humorous side of the security community<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/funsec/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/funsec.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://linuxbox.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/funsec"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="cert" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/cert/"><img src="/images/cert-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="cert logo"></a><p><b><a href="/cert/">CERT Advisories</a></b> &mdash; The <a href="http://www.cert.org/">Computer Emergency Response Team</a> has been responding to security incidents and sharing vulnerability information since the Morris Worm hit in 1986. This archive combines their technical security alerts, tips, and current activity lists.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/cert/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/cert.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.us-cert.gov/cas/signup.html"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> <li><a class="showbutton" href="/cert/"><span class="show-id">cert</span>Latest Posts</a></ul> <blockquote id="latest-cert" class="latest"> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/cert/2023/3">Apple Releases Security Updates for Multiple Products</a></strong> <em>CISA (Mar 28)</em><br> Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) - Defend Today, Secure Tomorrow<br> <br> You are subscribed to Cybersecurity Advisories for Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. This information <br> has recently been updated and is now available.<br> <br> Apple Releases Security Updates for Multiple Products [ <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/alerts/2023/03/28/apple-releases-security-updates-multiple-products">https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/alerts/2023/03/28/apple-releases-security-updates-multiple-products</a> ] 03/28/2023 01:00 <br> PM EDT <br> <br> Apple...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/cert/2023/2">CISA Releases Six Industrial Control Systems Advisories</a></strong> <em>CISA (Mar 23)</em><br> Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) - Defend Today, Secure Tomorrow<br> <br> You are subscribed to Cybersecurity Advisories for Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. This information <br> has recently been updated, and is now available.<br> <br> CISA Releases Six Industrial Control Systems Advisories [ <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/alerts/2023/03/23/cisa-releases-six-industrial-control-systems-advisories">https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/alerts/2023/03/23/cisa-releases-six-industrial-control-systems-advisories</a> ] 03/23/2023 <br> 08:00 AM EDT...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/cert/2023/1">CISA Releases Eight Industrial Control Systems Advisories</a></strong> <em>CISA (Mar 21)</em><br> Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) - Defend Today, Secure Tomorrow<br> <br> You are subscribed to Cybersecurity Advisories for Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. This information <br> has recently been updated, and is now available.<br> <br> CISA Releases Eight Industrial Control Systems Advisories [ <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/alerts/2023/03/21/cisa-releases-eight-industrial-control-systems-advisories">https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/alerts/2023/03/21/cisa-releases-eight-industrial-control-systems-advisories</a> ] <br> 03/21/2023 08:00 AM...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/cert/2023/0">CISA and NSA Release Enduring Security Framework Guidance on Identity and Access Management</a></strong> <em>CISA (Mar 21)</em><br> Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) - Defend Today, Secure Tomorrow<br> <br> You are subscribed to Cybersecurity Advisories for Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. This information <br> has recently been updated, and is now available.<br> <br> CISA and NSA Release Enduring Security Framework Guidance on Identity and Access Management [...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> </blockquote> </div> <div id="oss-sec" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/oss-sec/"><img src="/images/oss-sec-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="oss-sec logo"></a><p><b><a href="/oss-sec/">Open Source Security</a></b> &mdash; Discussion of security flaws, concepts, and practices in the Open Source community<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/oss-sec/2025/q1/index.html"><img src="/images/current-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Current period icon">Current Quarter</a> <li><a href="/oss-sec/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/oss-sec.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://oss-security.openwall.org/wiki/mailing-lists/oss-security"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> <li><a class="showbutton" href="/oss-sec/"><span class="show-id">oss-sec</span>Latest Posts</a></ul> <blockquote id="latest-oss-sec" class="latest"> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/149">Re: CVE-2025-1094: PostgreSQL: Quoting APIs miss neutralizing quoting syntax in text that fails encoding validation, enabling psql SQL injection</a></strong> <em>Solar Designer (Feb 20)</em><br> This has in fact happened:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.postgresql.org/about/news/postgresql-174-168-1512-1417-and-1320-released-3018/">https://www.postgresql.org/about/news/postgresql-174-168-1512-1417-and-1320-released-3018/</a><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/174006113082.664.12166915817407398396%40wrigleys.postgresql.org">https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/174006113082.664.12166915817407398396%40wrigleys.postgresql.org</a><br> <br> Alexander<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/148">Exim: CVE-2025-26794: upcoming security release</a></strong> <em>Heiko Schlittermann (Feb 19)</em><br> CVE-2025-26794<br> <br> Dear Exim users,<br> <br> we got a vulnerability report and are going to release a security<br> release on Friday, Feb 21th, 2025, at 12:00 UTC (coordinated<br> release date).<br> <br> Distribution packagers are informed already.<br> <br> The reported vulnerability is limited to the current Exim version 4.98.<br> Older versions are not affected.<br> <br> Please understand that we don&apos;t share any further details yet.<br> <br> The new version 4.98.1 *will* be available<br> <br> via Git...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/147">Announce: OpenSSH 9.9p2 released</a></strong> <em>Damien Miller (Feb 18)</em><br> OpenSSH 9.9p2 has just been released. It will be available from the<br> mirrors listed at <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.openssh.com/">https://www.openssh.com/</a> shortly.<br> <br> OpenSSH is a 100% complete SSH protocol 2.0 implementation and<br> includes sftp client and server support.<br> <br> Once again, we would like to thank the OpenSSH community for their<br> continued support of the project, especially those who contributed<br> code or patches, reported bugs, tested snapshots or donated to the<br> project. More...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/146">GRUB CVE disclosures</a></strong> <em>Jan Setje-Eilers (Feb 18)</em><br> On February 18th at 10am PST the following CVEs were disclosed to the <br> public via this message sent to grub-devel:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/grub-devel/2025-02/msg00024.html">https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/grub-devel/2025-02/msg00024.html</a><br> <br> You may expect the CVEs to go public in the various databases in the <br> coming hours.<br> <br> 1) CVE-2024-45774: reader/jpeg: Heap OOB Write during JPEG parsing.<br> 2) CVE-2024-45775: commands/extcmd: Missing check for failed allocation.<br> 3) CVE-2024-45776: grub-core/gettext:...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/145">Multiple vulnerabilities in libxml2</a></strong> <em>Nick Wellnhofer (Feb 18)</em><br> These issues are fixed in 2.12.10, 2.13.6 and the upcoming 2.14.0 release. Older branches won&apos;t receive official <br> updates.<br> <br> [CVE-2024-56171] Use-after-free in xmlSchemaIDCFillNodeTables<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2/-/issues/828">https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2/-/issues/828</a><br> <br> [CVE-2025-24928] Stack-buffer-overflow in xmlSnprintfElements<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2/-/issues/847">https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2/-/issues/847</a><br> <br> Null-deref in xmlPatMatch<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2/-/issues/861">https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2/-/issues/861</a><br> <br> Nick<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/144">MitM attack against OpenSSH&apos;s VerifyHostKeyDNS-enabled client</a></strong> <em>Qualys Security Advisory (Feb 18)</em><br> Qualys Security Advisory<br> <br> CVE-2025-26465: MitM attack against OpenSSH&apos;s VerifyHostKeyDNS-enabled<br> client<br> <br> CVE-2025-26466: DoS attack against OpenSSH&apos;s client and server<br> <br> ========================================================================<br> Contents<br> ========================================================================<br> <br> Summary<br> Background<br> Experiments<br> Results<br> MitM attack against OpenSSH&apos;s VerifyHostKeyDNS-enabled client<br> DoS...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/143">Multiple Vulnerabilities in U-Boot</a></strong> <em>Richard Weinberger (Feb 17)</em><br> ## Summary<br> <br> - *Identifier:* sigma-star-sa-2024-002<br> - *Vendor:* -<br> - *Product/Software:* [U-Boot](<a rel="nofollow" href="https://source.denx.de/u-boot">https://source.denx.de/u-boot</a>)<br> - *Affected versions:* &lt;= 2024.10<br> - *Fixed versions:* v2025.01-rc1<br> - *CVE IDs:* CVE-2024-57254, CVE-2024-57255, CVE-2024-57256, CVE-2024-57257, CVE-2024-57258, <br> CVE-2024-57259<br> <br> ## Affected Product and Vendor<br> <br> Source:...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/142">Multiple Vulnerabilities in Barebox</a></strong> <em>Richard Weinberger (Feb 17)</em><br> ## Summary<br> <br> - *Identifier:* sigma-star-sa-2024-003<br> - *Vendor:* -<br> - *Product/Software:* [Barebox](<a rel="nofollow" href="https://barebox.org">https://barebox.org</a>)<br> - *Affected versions:* &lt; v2025.01.0<br> - *Fixed versions:* v2025.01.0<br> - *CVE IDs:* CVE-2024-57260, CVE-2024-57261, CVE-2024-57262<br> <br> ## Affected Product and Vendor<br> <br> Source: <a rel="nofollow" href="https://barebox.org/">https://barebox.org/</a><br> <br> ## Description<br> <br> Multuple vulnerabilities...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/141">Re: CVE-2025-1094: PostgreSQL: Quoting APIs miss neutralizing quoting syntax in text that fails encoding validation, enabling psql SQL injection</a></strong> <em>James Addison (Feb 16)</em><br> For anyone considering upgrading: please note also that the fix for<br> this vulnerability introduced a regression[1] that should be addressed<br> by subsequent upcoming releases of PostgreSQL on Thursday 2025-02-20<br> (a few days from now).<br> <br> [1] - <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/272abbd9-d24c-49f1-8b61-83721906aa3b">https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/272abbd9-d24c-49f1-8b61-83721906aa3b</a> () postgresql org<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/140">CVE-2025-1094: PostgreSQL: Quoting APIs miss neutralizing quoting syntax in text that fails encoding validation, enabling psql SQL injection</a></strong> <em>Solar Designer (Feb 16)</em><br> Hi,<br> <br> As announced on February 13 in:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.postgresql.org/about/news/postgresql-173-167-1511-1416-and-1319-released-3015/">https://www.postgresql.org/about/news/postgresql-173-167-1511-1416-and-1319-released-3015/</a><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/173945575457.197393.6175786842655230205%40wrigleys.postgresql.org">https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/173945575457.197393.6175786842655230205%40wrigleys.postgresql.org</a><br> <br> This vulnerability is related to BeyondTrust CVE-2024-12356:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://infosec.exchange/@catc0n/113997298617317751">https://infosec.exchange/@catc0n/113997298617317751</a><br> <br> In Caitlin Condon&apos;s words in the thread above:<br> <br> The referenced Rapid7 blog post:...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/139">[vim-security] heap use-after-free in str_to_reg() in Vim &lt;</a></strong> <em>Christian Brabandt (Feb 16)</em><br> A heap use-after-free was found in str_to_reg() in Vim &lt; 9.1.1115<br> ==================================================================<br> Date: 16.02.2025<br> Severity: Medium<br> CVE: *not yet assigned<br> CWE: Use-after-free (CWE-416)<br> <br> Vim allows to redirect screen messages using the `:redir` ex command to<br> register, variables and files. It also allows to show the contents of<br> registers using the `:registers` or `:display` ex command.<br> <br> When redirecting the...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/138">[CVE-2024-3220] CPython: Default mimetype known files writeable on Windows</a></strong> <em>Alan Coopersmith (Feb 14)</em><br> -------- Forwarded Message --------<br> Subject: [Security-announce][CVE-2024-3220] Default mimetype known files <br> writeable on Windows<br> Date: Fri, 14 Feb 2025 10:16:45 -0600<br> From: Seth Larson &lt;seth () python org&gt;<br> Reply-To: security-sig () python org<br> To: security-announce () python org<br> <br> There is a LOW severity vulnerability affecting CPython.<br> <br> There is a defect in the CPython standard library module “mimetypes” where on...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/137">CVE-2024-56180: Apache EventMesh: raft Hessian Deserialization Vulnerability allowing remote code execution</a></strong> <em>Xue Weiming (Feb 14)</em><br> Severity: moderate<br> <br> Affected versions:<br> <br> - Apache EventMesh unaffected<br> <br> Description:<br> <br> CWE-502 Deserialization of Untrusted Data at the eventmesh-meta-raft plugin module in Apache EventMesh master branch <br> without release version on windows\linux\mac os e.g. platforms allows attackers to send controlled message and remote <br> code execute via hessian deserialization rpc protocol. Users can use the code under the master branch in project repo <br> or...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/136">Re: [musl] CVE-2025-26519: musl libc: input-controlled out-of-bounds write primitive in iconv()</a></strong> <em>Daniel Gutson (Feb 14)</em><br> El vie, 14 feb 2025, 07:14, Nick Wellnhofer &lt;wellnhofer () aevum de&gt; escribió:<br> <br> Thanks, AFL?<br> <br> My work is related to static checkers and linters (we will contribute an<br> important patch to weggli soon), so I was wondering if you used something<br> that used symbolic execution.<br> <br> Nice job!<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2025/q1/135">Re: [musl] CVE-2025-26519: musl libc: input-controlled out-of-bounds write primitive in iconv()</a></strong> <em>Nick Wellnhofer (Feb 14)</em><br> The bug was discovered with basic fuzz testing. As libxml2 maintainer, I found more and more issues in various iconv <br> implementations by accident which is a strong indicator that all this code isn&apos;t tested enough. The iconv API is also <br> trivial to fuzz, so it seemed like a nice weekend project.<br> <br> Nick<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> </blockquote> </div> <div id="securecoding" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/securecoding/"><img src="/images/securecoding-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="securecoding logo"></a><p><b><a href="/securecoding/">Secure Coding</a></b> &mdash; The Secure Coding list (SC-L) is an open forum for the discussion on developing secure applications. It is moderated by the authors of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0596002424?tag=secbks-20">Secure Coding: Principles and Practices</a>.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/securecoding/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/securecoding.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.securecoding.org/list/"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="educause" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/educause/"><img src="/images/educause-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="educause logo"></a><p><b><a href="/educause/">Educause Security Discussion</a></b> &mdash; Securing networks and computers in an academic environment.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/educause/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/educause.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.educause.edu/groups/security"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <h2 id="internet" class="purpleheader">Internet Issues and Infrastructure</h2><div id="nanog" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/nanog/"><img src="/images/nanog-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="nanog logo"></a><p><b><a href="/nanog/">NANOG</a></b> &mdash; The <a href="http://www.nanog.org/">North American Network Operators' Group</a> discusses fundamental Internet infrastructure issues such as routing, IP address allocation, and containing malicious activity.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/nanog/2025/Feb/index.html"><img src="/images/current-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Current period icon">Current Month</a> <li><a href="/nanog/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/nanog.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.nanog.org/mailinglist/"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> <li><a class="showbutton" href="/nanog/"><span class="show-id">nanog</span>Latest Posts</a></ul> <blockquote id="latest-nanog" class="latest"> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/100">advocating for Open Source and Compileable Code in Hardware and Software Development</a></strong> <em>Volkan SALiH (Feb 21)</em><br> *Subject:* Advocating for Open Source and Compileable Code in Hardware <br> and Software Development<br> <br> *Dear NANOG Community,*<br> <br> As we navigate an era of rapid technological advancement, collaboration <br> and openness in hardware and software development are more critical than <br> ever. It has come to our attention that personnel from Huawei, <br> Futurewei, and ZTE may be subscribed to this list or, at the very least, <br> following the archives. This message...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/99">Re: Noisy prefixes in BGP</a></strong> <em>Mike Leber via NANOG (Feb 21)</em><br> Hurricane Electric recently (a few months ago) started measuring <br> repeated announcements, repeated withdrawals, in addition to flapping <br> prefixes.<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://bgp.he.net/report/netstats#_flap">https://bgp.he.net/report/netstats#_flap</a><br> <br> Stats are organized by prefix, ASN, and peer IP relative to flapping <br> prefixes, repeated announcements, and repeated withdrawals.<br> <br> Mike.<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/98">Re: Filtering &quot;Illegal&quot; Video</a></strong> <em>Collin Anderson (Feb 20)</em><br> This thread wisely points out the technical reasons the request is<br> difficult, but I think the underlying answer is a bit closer to Brian and<br> Joel&apos;s response, which is that it&apos;s country-specific. In a fair amount of<br> jurisdictions, there&apos;s either a centralized list or apparatus to deal with<br> the requirement, or you&apos;re having to hash it out with some court order or<br> settlement. Where there&apos;s still ambiguity or some lingering...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/97">Re: Filtering &quot;Illegal&quot; Video</a></strong> <em>Mike Hammett (Feb 20)</em><br> More than one vendor has claimed to be able to do this. I have been under the weather the past week, so I haven&apos;t been <br> able to have conversations with the rest.<br> <br> However, the one I talked to more or less has a team whose purpose is to search out the content as if you were a user, <br> build a signature, and push the signature out. Obviously, that won&apos;t stop individual Plex, FTP, etc. servers, but it <br> sounds like it goes by the 90/10 rule....<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/96">Re: Filtering &quot;Illegal&quot; Video</a></strong> <em>Tom Beecher (Feb 20)</em><br> &apos;With precision&apos; being the operative phrase, then no. Plenty of stuff out<br> there that can do things in this space, but all of it is brute force or<br> kludgy methods.<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/95">Re: Request for Deployment of Google/YouTube Global Cache Servers in Türkiye (Istanbul, Izmir and Ankara of TURKEI)</a></strong> <em>Tom Beecher (Feb 20)</em><br> This mailing list is not the appropriate avenue for such requests. No idea<br> why you would think it was.<br> <br> Google lays out their process here :<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.google.com/interconnect/answer/9058809?hl=en">https://support.google.com/interconnect/answer/9058809?hl=en</a><br> <br> On Thu, Feb 20, 2025 at 6:33 PM Volkan SALiH &lt;volkan.salih.06 () gmail com&gt;<br> wrote:<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/94">Request for Deployment of Google/YouTube Global Cache Servers in Türkiye (Istanbul, Izmir and Ankara of TURKEI)</a></strong> <em>Volkan SALiH (Feb 20)</em><br> *Subject:* Request for Deployment of Google/YouTube Global Cache Servers <br> in Türkiye<br> <br> *To Whom It May Concern,*<br> <br> I am a government officer and a colleague of Mr. Ahmet Hamdi Atalay <br> (ahatalay () turksat com tr), who serves at Türksat.<br> <br> Currently, internet users in Türkiye experience *Google/YouTube speeds <br> limited to approximately 15-20 Mbps*, which is significantly lower than <br> the global standards. As Türksat personnel and civil servants...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/93">Re: Filtering &quot;Illegal&quot; Video</a></strong> <em>Jay (Feb 20)</em><br> As far as I know the Audible Magic CopySense box does not exist as a<br> product you could get or expect to do anything for you for 10 years.<br> <br> There&apos;s a major decline in P2P traffic on the internet after 2010 ,<br> and privacy and encryption features&apos; use in internet protocols has<br> greatly increased since then such as websites using HTTP/3,<br> TLS1.3+ESNI, or DNS over HTTPS. Specifically to mitigate privacy concerns<br> and prevent spying boxes from...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/92">Re: Filtering &quot;Illegal&quot; Video</a></strong> <em>joel jaeggli (Feb 20)</em><br> Court orders received by network operators in countries where this is <br> done frequently are typicallly either of the form:<br> <br> * block this ip address, prefix or address/prefix set<br> <br> * configure your recursive resolver to not resolve queries for the <br> specified domain name or zone.<br> <br> They can be more involved or assume the use of specialized equipment if <br> implemented with coordination of the operator. e.g. port 443 handshakes <br> with the following sni,...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/91">Re: Filtering &quot;Illegal&quot; Video</a></strong> <em>Christopher Morrow (Feb 20)</em><br> Assuming that this isn&apos;t &apos;bittorrent&apos; sorts of things where (aside<br> from encrypted dht? I dont&apos; know bittorrent, sorry) the traffic<br> is probably encrypted/tls ... how would any of this realistically work?<br> <br> 1) install a CA on your client&apos;s machines - HAHAHAHAH no.<br> 2) force-break the TLS inspect and send along - HAHAHAAHA also no.<br> 3) by identifying already known &apos;bad sources&apos; and classifying based on that?...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/90">Scheduled Maintenance: Mailman Upgrade</a></strong> <em>Valerie Wittkop (Feb 20)</em><br> NANOG Community,<br> <br> During the evening on Friday February 28, 2025 between 8 pm to 12 am EST<br> (Saturday March 1, 0100 to 0500 UTC), NANOG will perform an upgrade of the<br> mailman software and migration of archives. During this time, all mailing<br> lists will be unavailable, including the ability to make changes to your<br> subscription options.<br> <br> We expect this migration to be completed in three hours time or backed out.<br> <br> Detailed notes:<br> <br> NANOG will be...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/89">Streaming Bandwidth Requirements..</a></strong> <em>Volkan SALiH (Feb 20)</em><br> Dear NANOG members,<br> <br> Hoping that some members working at Google/YouTube might be part of this <br> group, I respectfully suggest adding or noting the following to <br> YouTube&apos;s bandwidth requirements page [1]:<br> <br> * *8K (H.264):* 110 Mbps<br> * *8K (H.265):* 60 Mbps<br> <br> [1] <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/78358?hl=en">https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/78358?hl=en</a><br> <br> *References and Standards:*<br> <br> * *ITU-T H.265 (HEVC) Standard:* High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC)<br> significantly reduces...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/88">RE: Filtering &quot;Illegal&quot; Video</a></strong> <em>Kevin McCormick (Feb 20)</em><br> Might want to look at Audible Magic.<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.audiblemagic.com/">https://www.audiblemagic.com/</a><br> <br> They do identification and filtering of copyrighted content.<br> <br> University I worked at had a box that would identify students pirating content and would then black hole their IP <br> addresses.<br> <br> Helped the University avoid receiving and processing DMCA notices.<br> <br> Thank you,<br> <br> Kevin McCormick<br> <br> -----Original Message-----<br> From: NANOG &lt;nanog-bounces+kmccormick=mdtc.net () nanog org&gt;...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/87">Re: Paging RIT (Rochester Institute of Technology) network/sytems people</a></strong> <em>Harry Hoffman via NANOG (Feb 20)</em><br> Just pinged them on your behalf. I expect someone will reach out directly<br> to you.<br> <br> Cheers,<br> Harry<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2025/Feb/86">Paging RIT (Rochester Institute of Technology) network/sytems people</a></strong> <em>Rich Kulawiec (Feb 20)</em><br> I filed an abuse report 11 days ago (Feb 9) and have received no response.<br> Attempts to follow up by phone using the contact info in ARIN&apos;s records<br> have yielded:<br> <br> - one phone number that&apos;s an overall campus directory<br> - one phone number that&apos;s a generic outbound line<br> - one phone number that offers an option to connect to &quot;the<br> on-call person&quot;, however, no such person has ever been...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> </blockquote> </div> <div id="interesting-people" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/interesting-people/"><img src="/images/interesting-people-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="interesting-people logo"></a><p><b><a href="/interesting-people/">Interesting People</a></b> &mdash; David Farber moderates this list for discussion involving internet governance, infrastructure, and any other topics he finds fascinating<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/interesting-people/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/interesting-people.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.listbox.com/subscribe/?list_id=247"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="risks" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/risks/"><img src="/images/risks-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="risks logo"></a><p><b><a href="/risks/">The RISKS Forum</a></b> &mdash; Peter G. Neumann moderates this regular digest of current events which demonstrate risks to the public in computers and related systems. Security risks are often discussed.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/risks/2025/q1/index.html"><img src="/images/current-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Current period icon">Current Quarter</a> <li><a href="/risks/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/risks.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> <li><a class="showbutton" href="/risks/"><span class="show-id">risks</span>Latest Posts</a></ul> <blockquote id="latest-risks" class="latest"> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2025/q1/3">Risks Digest 34.56</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Feb 16)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Sunday 16 Feb 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 56<br> <br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****<br> This issue is archived at &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.risks.org">http://www.risks.org</a>&gt; as<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.56">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.56</a>&gt;<br> The current issue can also be found at<br> &lt;...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2025/q1/2">Risks Digest 34.54</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Feb 06)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Thursday 6 Jan 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 54<br> <br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****<br> This issue is archived at &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.risks.org">http://www.risks.org</a>&gt; as<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.54">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.54</a>&gt;<br> The current issue can also be found at<br> &lt;...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2025/q1/1">Risks Digest 34.53</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Jan 26)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Sunday 26 Jan 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 53<br> <br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****<br> This issue is archived at &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.risks.org">http://www.risks.org</a>&gt; as<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.53">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.53</a>&gt;<br> The current issue can also be found at<br> &lt;...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2025/q1/0">(no subject)</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Jan 11)</em><br> Risks Digest 34.52<br> <br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Saturday 11 January 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 52<br> <br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****<br> This issue is archived at &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.risks.org">http://www.risks.org</a>&gt; as<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.52">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.52</a>&gt;<br> The current issue can also be found at...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2024/q4/5">Risks Digest 34.51</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Dec 29)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Sunday 29 December 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 51<br> <br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****<br> This issue is archived at &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.risks.org">http://www.risks.org</a>&gt; as<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.51">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.51</a>&gt;<br> The current issue can also be found at<br> &lt;...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2024/q4/4">Risks Digest 34.50</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Nov 23)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Saturday 23 Nov 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 50<br> <br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****<br> This issue is archived at &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.risks.org">http://www.risks.org</a>&gt; as<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.50">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.50</a>&gt;<br> The current issue can also be found at<br> &lt;...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2024/q4/3">Risks Digest 34.49</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Nov 16)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Saturday 15 Nov 2024 Volume 34 : Issue No 49<br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****<br> This issue is archived at &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.risks.org">http://www.risks.org</a>&gt; as<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.49">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.49</a>&gt;<br> The current issue can also be found at<br> &lt;...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2024/q4/2">Risks Digest 34.48</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Nov 08)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Friday 8 Nov 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 48<br> <br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****<br> This issue is archived at &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.risks.org">http://www.risks.org</a>&gt; as<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.48">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.48</a>&gt;<br> The current issue can also be found at<br> &lt;...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2024/q4/1">Risks Digest 34.47</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Oct 17)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Thursday 17 Oct 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 47<br> <br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****<br> This issue is archived at &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.risks.org">http://www.risks.org</a>&gt; as<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.47">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.47</a>&gt;<br> The current issue can also be found at<br> &lt;...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2024/q4/0">Risks Digest 34.46</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Oct 01)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Tuesday 1 Oct 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 46<br> <br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****<br> This issue is archived at &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.risks.org">http://www.risks.org</a>&gt; as<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.46">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.46</a>&gt;<br> The current issue can also be found at<br> &lt;...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> </blockquote> </div> <div id="dataloss" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/dataloss/"><img src="/images/dataloss-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="dataloss logo"></a><p><b><a href="/dataloss/">BreachExchange</a></b> &mdash; BreachExchange focuses on all things data breach. Topics include actual data breaches, cyber insurance, risk management, metrics and more. This archive includes its predecessor, the Data Loss news and discussion lists.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/dataloss/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/dataloss.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="https://www.riskbasedsecurity.com/mailing-lists/"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> <li><a class="showbutton" href="/dataloss/"><span class="show-id">dataloss</span>Latest Posts</a></ul> <blockquote id="latest-dataloss" class="latest"> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/51">Healthcare organizations face rising ransomware attacks – and are paying up</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (Jun 03)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.theregister.com/2022/06/03/healthcare-ransomware-pay-sophos/">https://www.theregister.com/2022/06/03/healthcare-ransomware-pay-sophos/</a><br> <br> Healthcare organizations, already an attractive target for ransomware given<br> the highly sensitive data they hold, saw such attacks almost double between<br> 2020 and 2021, according to a survey released this week by Sophos.<br> <br> The outfit&apos;s team also found that while polled healthcare orgs are quite<br> likely to pay ransoms, they rarely get all of their data returned if they<br> do...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/50">A digital conflict between Russia and Ukraine rages on behind the scenes of war</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (Jun 03)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://wskg.org/npr_story_post/a-digital-conflict-between-russia-and-ukraine-rages-on-behind-the-scenes-of-war/">https://wskg.org/npr_story_post/a-digital-conflict-between-russia-and-ukraine-rages-on-behind-the-scenes-of-war/</a><br> <br> SEATTLE — On the sidelines of a conference in Estonia on Wednesday, a<br> senior U.S. intelligence official told British outlet Sky News that the<br> U.S. is running offensive cyber operations in support of Ukraine.<br> <br> “My job is to provide a series of options to the secretary of defense and<br> the president, and so that’s what I do,” said...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/49">Researchers Uncover Malware Controlling Thousands of Sites in Parrot TDS Network</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (Jun 03)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thehackernews.com/2022/06/researchers-uncover-malware-controlling.html">https://thehackernews.com/2022/06/researchers-uncover-malware-controlling.html</a><br> <br> The Parrot traffic direction system (TDS) that came to light earlier this<br> year has had a larger impact than previously thought, according to new<br> research.<br> <br> Sucuri, which has been tracking the same campaign since February 2019 under<br> the name &quot;NDSW/NDSX,&quot; said that &quot;the malware was one of the top infections&quot;<br> detected in 2021, accounting for more than...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/48">FBI, CISA: Don&apos;t get caught in Karakurt&apos;s extortion web</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (Jun 03)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.theregister.com/2022/06/03/fbi_cisa_warn_karakurt_extortion/">https://www.theregister.com/2022/06/03/fbi_cisa_warn_karakurt_extortion/</a><br> <br> The Feds have warned organizations about a lesser-known extortion gang<br> Karakurt, which demands ransoms as high as $13 million and, some<br> cybersecurity folks say, may be linked to the notorious Conti crew.<br> <br> In a joint advisory [PDF] this week, the FBI, CISA and US Treasury<br> Department outlined technical details about how Karakurt operates, along<br> with actions to take,...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/47">DOJ Seizes 3 Web Domains Used to Sell Stolen Data and DDoS Services</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (Jun 02)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thehackernews.com/2022/06/doj-seizes-3-web-domains-used-to-sell.html">https://thehackernews.com/2022/06/doj-seizes-3-web-domains-used-to-sell.html</a><br> <br> The U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) on Wednesday announced the seizure of<br> three domains used by cybercriminals to trade stolen personal information<br> and facilitate distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks for hire.<br> <br> This includes weleakinfo[.]to, ipstress[.]in, and ovh-booter[.]com, the<br> former of which allowed its users to traffic hacked personal data and<br> offered a...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/46">Chinese Hackers Begin Exploiting Latest Microsoft Office Zero-Day Vulnerability</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (Jun 02)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thehackernews.com/2022/05/chinese-hackers-begin-exploiting-latest.html">https://thehackernews.com/2022/05/chinese-hackers-begin-exploiting-latest.html</a><br> <br> An advanced persistent threat (APT) actor aligned with Chinese state<br> interests has been observed weaponizing the new zero-day flaw in Microsoft<br> Office to achieve code execution on affected systems.<br> <br> &quot;TA413 CN APT spotted [in-the-wild] exploiting the Follina zero-day using<br> URLs to deliver ZIP archives which contain Word Documents that use the<br> technique,&quot;...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/45">US military hackers conducting offensive operations in support of Ukraine, says head of Cyber Command</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (Jun 02)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.three.fm/news/world-news/us-military-hackers-conducting-offensive-operations-in-support-of-ukraine-says-head-of-cyber-command/">https://www.three.fm/news/world-news/us-military-hackers-conducting-offensive-operations-in-support-of-ukraine-says-head-of-cyber-command/</a><br> <br> US military hackers have conducted offensive operations in support of<br> Ukraine, the head of US Cyber Command has told Sky News.<br> <br> In an exclusive interview, General Paul Nakasone also explained how &quot;hunt<br> forward&quot; operations were allowing the United States to search out foreign<br> hackers and identify...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/44">SideWinder Hackers Launched Over a 1, 000 Cyber Attacks Over the Past 2 Years</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (May 31)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thehackernews.com/2022/05/sidewinder-hackers-launched-over-1000.html">https://thehackernews.com/2022/05/sidewinder-hackers-launched-over-1000.html</a><br> <br> An &quot;aggressive&quot; advanced persistent threat (APT) group known as SideWinder<br> has been linked to over 1,000 new attacks since April 2020.<br> <br> &quot;Some of the main characteristics of this threat actor that make it stand<br> out among the others, are the sheer number, high frequency and persistence<br> of their attacks and the large collection of encrypted and obfuscated...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/43">Hackers are Selling US University Credentials Online, FBI Says</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (May 31)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://tech.co/news/hackers-are-selling-us-university-credentials-online-fbi-says">https://tech.co/news/hackers-are-selling-us-university-credentials-online-fbi-says</a><br> <br> The Federal Bureau of Investigation has warned US universities and colleges<br> that it has found banks of login credentials and other data relating to VPN<br> access circulating on cybercriminals forums.<br> <br> The fear is that such data will be sold and subsequently used by malicious<br> actors to orchestrate attacks on other accounts owned by the same students,<br> in the hope...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/42">Interpol Nabs 3 Nigerian Scammers Behind Malware-based Attacks</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (May 31)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thehackernews.com/2022/05/interpol-nabs-3-nigerian-scammers.html">https://thehackernews.com/2022/05/interpol-nabs-3-nigerian-scammers.html</a><br> <br> Interpol on Monday announced the arrest of three suspected global scammers<br> in Nigeria for using remote access trojans (RATs) such as Agent Tesla to<br> facilitate malware-enabled cyber fraud.<br> <br> &quot;The men are thought to have used the RAT to reroute financial<br> transactions, stealing confidential online connection details from<br> corporate organizations, including oil and gas...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/41">U.S. Warns Against North Korean Hackers Posing as IT Freelancers</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (May 18)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://thehackernews.com/2022/05/us-warns-against-north-korean-hackers.html">https://thehackernews.com/2022/05/us-warns-against-north-korean-hackers.html</a><br> <br> Highly skilled software and mobile app developers from the Democratic<br> People&apos;s Republic of Korea (DPRK) are posing as &quot;non-DPRK nationals&quot; in<br> hopes of landing freelance employment in an attempt to enable the regime&apos;s<br> malicious cyber intrusions.<br> <br> That&apos;s according to a joint advisory from the U.S. Department of State, the<br> Department of the...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/40">FBI and NSA say: Stop doing these 10 things that let the hackers in</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (May 18)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.zdnet.com/article/fbi-and-nsa-say-stop-doing-these-10-things-that-let-the-hackers-in/">https://www.zdnet.com/article/fbi-and-nsa-say-stop-doing-these-10-things-that-let-the-hackers-in/</a><br> <br> Cyber attackers regularly exploit unpatched software vulnerabilities, but<br> they &quot;routinely&quot; target security misconfigurations for initial access, so<br> the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and its<br> peers have created a to-do list for defenders in today&apos;s heightened threat<br> environment.<br> <br> CISA, the FBI and National...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/39">Fifth of Businesses Say Cyber-Attack Nearly Broke Them</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (May 18)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/fifth-of-businesses-cyber-attack/">https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/fifth-of-businesses-cyber-attack/</a><br> <br> A fifth of US and European businesses have warned that a serious<br> cyber-attack nearly rendered them insolvent, with most (87%) viewing<br> compromise as a bigger threat than an economic downturn, according to<br> Hiscox.<br> <br> The insurer polled over 5000 businesses in the US, UK, Ireland, France,<br> Spain, Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium to compile its annual Hiscox<br> Cyber...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/38">Hacker And Ransomware Designer Charged For Use And Sale Of Ransomware, And Profit Sharing Arrangements With Cybercriminals</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (May 18)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.shorenewsnetwork.com/2022/05/16/hacker-and-ransomware-designer-charged-for-use-and-sale-of-ransomware-and-profit-sharing-arrangements-with-cybercriminals/">https://www.shorenewsnetwork.com/2022/05/16/hacker-and-ransomware-designer-charged-for-use-and-sale-of-ransomware-and-profit-sharing-arrangements-with-cybercriminals/</a><br> <br> A criminal complaint was unsealed today in federal court in Brooklyn, New<br> York, charging Moises Luis Zagala Gonzalez (Zagala), also known as<br> “Nosophoros,” “Aesculapius” and “Nebuchadnezzar,” a citizen of France and<br> Venezuela who resides in Venezuela, with attempted...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/2022/q2/37">State of Ransomware shows huge growth in threat and impacts</a></strong> <em>Matthew Wheeler (May 04)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.continuitycentral.com/index.php/news/technology/7275-state-of-ransomware-shows-huge-growth-in-threat-and-impacts">https://www.continuitycentral.com/index.php/news/technology/7275-state-of-ransomware-shows-huge-growth-in-threat-and-impacts</a><br> <br> Sophos has released its annual survey and review of real-world ransomware<br> experiences in its ‘State of Ransomware 2022’ report. This shows that 66<br> percent of organizations surveyed were hit with ransomware in 2021, up from<br> 37 percent in 2020.<br> <br> The average ransom paid by organizations that had data encrypted in their...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> </blockquote> </div> <h2 id="oss" class="purpleheader">Open Source Tool Development</h2><div id="metasploit" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/metasploit/"><img src="/images/metasploit-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="metasploit logo"></a><p><b><a href="/metasploit/">Metasploit</a></b> &mdash; Development discussion for <a href="http://metasploit.com/">Metasploit</a>, the premier open source remote exploitation tool<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/metasploit/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/metasploit.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://spool.metasploit.com/mailman/listinfo/framework"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="wireshark" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/wireshark/"><img src="/images/wireshark-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="wireshark logo"></a><p><b><a href="/wireshark/">Wireshark</a></b> &mdash; Discussion of the free and open source <a href="http://www.wireshark.org/">Wireshark</a> network sniffer. No other sniffer (commercial or otherwise) comes close. This archive combines the Wireshark announcement, users, and developers mailing lists.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/wireshark/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/wireshark.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.wireshark.org/lists/"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> </ul> </div> <div id="snort" class="l-abstract"> <a href="/snort/"><img src="/images/snort-logo.png" width="80" class="right" alt="snort logo"></a><p><b><a href="/snort/">Snort</a></b> &mdash; Everyone's favorite open source IDS, <a href="http://www.snort.org/">Snort</a>. This archive combines the snort-announce, snort-devel, snort-users, and snort-sigs lists.<ul class="inline"><li class="first"><a href="/snort/2025/q1/index.html"><img src="/images/current-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Current period icon">Current Quarter</a> <li><a href="/snort/"><img src="/images/archive-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Archive icon">Archived Posts</a> <li><a href="/rss/snort.rss"><img src="/images/feed-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="RSS icon">RSS Feed</a> <li><a href="http://www.snort.org/community/mailing-lists"><img src="/images/about-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="About icon">About List</a> <li><a class="showbutton" href="/snort/"><span class="show-id">snort</span>Latest Posts</a></ul> <blockquote id="latest-snort" class="latest"> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/17">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-02-20</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Feb 20)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> This release adds and modifies rules in several categories.<br> <br> Details:<br> Talos has added and modified multiple rules in the browser-ie,<br> file-pdf, malware-cnc, malware-other and server-webapp rule sets to<br> provide coverage for emerging threats from these technologies.<br> <br> For a complete list of new and modified rules please see:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.snort.org/advisories">https://www.snort.org/advisories</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/16">Snort IPS in Cisco ISR 4331 Router?</a></strong> <em>Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming via Snort-devel (Feb 18)</em><br> Subject: Snort IPS in Cisco ISR 4331 Router?<br> <br> Good day from Singapore,<br> <br> On the Software Downloads page for Cisco ISR 4331 router, link as follows:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/routers/4331-integrated-services-router-isr/model.html#~tab-downloads">https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/routers/4331-integrated-services-router-isr/model.html#~tab-downloads</a><br> <br> I saw UTD Snort IPS Engine Software.<br> <br> Is it an installer for the Snort IPS engine on Cisco ISR 4331 router?<br> <br> Can I really install and deploy Snort IPS on a Cisco ISR 4331 router?<br> <br> Thank you....<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/15">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-02-18</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Feb 18)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> This release adds and modifies rules in several categories.<br> <br> Details:<br> Talos has added and modified multiple rules in the browser-ie,<br> browser-plugins, file-office, file-pdf, indicator-compromise,<br> malware-cnc, protocol-scada, server-apache and server-webapp rule sets<br> to provide coverage for emerging threats from these technologies.<br> <br> For a complete list of new and modified rules please see:...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/14">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-02-13</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Feb 13)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> This release adds and modifies rules in several categories.<br> <br> Details:<br> Talos has added and modified multiple rules in the file-executable,<br> file-other, malware-cnc, os-other, policy-other, server-apache,<br> server-iis, server-mail and server-webapp rule sets to provide coverage<br> for emerging threats from these technologies.<br> <br> For a complete list of new and modified rules please see:...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/13">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-02-11</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Feb 11)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> Talos is aware of vulnerabilities affecting products from Microsoft<br> Corporation.<br> <br> Details:<br> Microsoft Vulnerability CVE-2025-21184:<br> A coding deficiency exists in Microsoft Windows Core Messaging<br> Elevation of Privileges Vulnerability that may lead to an escalation of<br> privilege.<br> <br> Rules to detect attacks targeting these vulnerabilities are included in<br> this release and are identified with:<br> Snort 2: GID 1,...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/12">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-02-06</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Feb 06)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> This release adds and modifies rules in several categories.<br> <br> Details:<br> Talos has added and modified multiple rules in the malware-cnc,<br> os-linux, os-windows, policy-other and server-webapp rule sets to<br> provide coverage for emerging threats from these technologies.<br> <br> For a complete list of new and modified rules please see:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.snort.org/advisories">https://www.snort.org/advisories</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/11">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-02-04</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Feb 04)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> This release adds and modifies rules in several categories.<br> <br> Details:<br> Talos has added and modified multiple rules in the file-office,<br> malware-cnc, malware-other, policy-other and server-webapp rule sets to<br> provide coverage for emerging threats from these technologies.<br> <br> For a complete list of new and modified rules please see:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.snort.org/advisories">https://www.snort.org/advisories</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/10">Re: Regarding snort3 application detection</a></strong> <em>Costas Kleopa (ckleopa) via Snort-devel (Jan 30)</em><br> Can you provide some logs on the output of the applications running during that version with Chrome so we can compare? <br> I am assuming this has something to do with QUIC traffic.<br> <br> From: Snort-devel &lt;snort-devel-bounces () lists snort org&gt; on behalf of Dinesh via Snort-devel &lt;snort-devel () lists <br> snort org&gt;<br> Date: Thursday, January 30, 2025 at 9:13 AM<br> To: snort-devel () lists snort org &lt;snort-devel () lists snort org&gt;<br> Subject:...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/9">Regarding snort3 application detection</a></strong> <em>Dinesh via Snort-devel (Jan 30)</em><br> Hi,<br> <br>     I am running snort-3.1.81 version for application detection. When i <br> am browsing the internet traffic with older version of chrome it is <br> detecting the applications correctly and with newer version of chrome <br> browser i am not able to detect  the applications the way it is <br> detecting with older versions.<br> <br>     Is there anything to do with newer version of chrome browser ?<br> <br>     I am using the command as below<br> <br>     snort -c...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/8">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-01-30</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Jan 30)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> This release adds and modifies rules in several categories.<br> <br> Details:<br> Talos has added and modified multiple rules in the and server-webapp<br> rule sets to provide coverage for emerging threats from these<br> technologies.<br> <br> For a complete list of new and modified rules please see:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.snort.org/advisories">https://www.snort.org/advisories</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/7">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-01-28</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Jan 28)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> This release adds and modifies rules in several categories.<br> <br> Details:<br> Talos has added and modified multiple rules in the file-identify,<br> file-multimedia, malware-cnc and server-webapp rule sets to provide<br> coverage for emerging threats from these technologies.<br> <br> For a complete list of new and modified rules please see:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.snort.org/advisories">https://www.snort.org/advisories</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/6">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-01-23</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Jan 23)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> This release adds and modifies rules in several categories.<br> <br> Details:<br> Talos has added and modified multiple rules in the and server-webapp<br> rule sets to provide coverage for emerging threats from these<br> technologies.<br> <br> For a complete list of new and modified rules please see:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.snort.org/advisories">https://www.snort.org/advisories</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/5">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-01-21</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Jan 21)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> This release adds and modifies rules in several categories.<br> <br> Details:<br> Talos has added and modified multiple rules in the malware-cnc,<br> malware-other and server-webapp rule sets to provide coverage for<br> emerging threats from these technologies.<br> <br> For a complete list of new and modified rules please see:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.snort.org/advisories">https://www.snort.org/advisories</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/4">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-01-16</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Jan 16)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> This release adds and modifies rules in several categories.<br> <br> Details:<br> Talos has added and modified multiple rules in the and malware-cnc<br> rule sets to provide coverage for emerging threats from these<br> technologies.<br> <br> For a complete list of new and modified rules please see:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.snort.org/advisories">https://www.snort.org/advisories</a><br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2025/q1/3">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2025-01-14</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Jan 14)</em><br> Talos Snort Subscriber Rules Update<br> <br> Synopsis:<br> Talos is aware of vulnerabilities affecting products from Microsoft<br> Corporation.<br> <br> Details:<br> Microsoft Vulnerability CVE-2025-21189:<br> A coding deficiency exists in Microsoft MapUrlToZone that may lead to<br> security feature bypass.<br> <br> Rules to detect attacks targeting these vulnerabilities are included in<br> this release and are identified with:<br> Snort 2: GID 1, SIDs 64454 through 64455,<br> Snort 3: GID 1, SID...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> </blockquote> </div> <h2 id="more" class="purpleheader">More Lists</h2><p>We also maintain archives for these lists (some are currently inactive):<ul><li><a href="/politech/">Declan McCullagh's Politech</a><li><a href="/tcpdump/">TCPDump/LibPCAP Dev</a><li><a href="/incidents/">Security Incidents</a><li><a href="/vuln-dev/">Vulnerability Development</a><li><a href="/vulnwatch/">Vulnerability Watch</a></ul> <h2 class="purpleheader">Related Resources</h2> <p>Read some old-school private security digests such as Zardoz at <a href="http://securitydigest.org">SecurityDigest.Org</a> <p>We're always looking for great network security related lists to archive. To suggest one, <a href="mailto:fyodor@nmap.org">mail Fyodor</a>. </main><!-- content --> <footer id="nst-foot"> <form class="nst-search" id="nst-foot-search" action="/search/"> <input class="nst-search-q" name="q" type="search" placeholder="Site Search"> <button class="nst-search-button" title="Search"> <img style="width:100%;aspect-ratio:1/1;" alt="" aria-hidden="true" src="/shared/images/nst-icons.svg#search"> </button> </form> <div class="flexlists"> <div class="fl-unit"> <h2><a class="nlink" href="https://nmap.org/">Nmap Security Scanner</a></h2> <ul> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://nmap.org/book/man.html">Ref Guide</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://nmap.org/book/install.html">Install Guide</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://nmap.org/docs.html">Docs</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://nmap.org/download.html">Download</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://nmap.org/oem/">Nmap OEM</a> </ul> </div> <div class="fl-unit"> <h2><a class="nlink" href="https://npcap.com/">Npcap packet capture</a></h2> <ul> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://npcap.com/guide/">User's Guide</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://npcap.com/guide/npcap-devguide.html#npcap-api">API docs</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://npcap.com/#download">Download</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://npcap.com/oem/">Npcap OEM</a> </ul> </div> <div class="fl-unit"> <h2><a class="nlink" href="https://seclists.org/">Security Lists</a></h2> <ul> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://seclists.org/nmap-announce/">Nmap Announce</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/">Nmap Dev</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/">Full Disclosure</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/">Open Source Security</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://seclists.org/dataloss/">BreachExchange</a> </ul> </div> <div class="fl-unit"> <h2><a class="nlink" href="https://sectools.org">Security Tools</a></h2> <ul> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://sectools.org/tag/vuln-scanners/">Vuln scanners</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://sectools.org/tag/pass-audit/">Password audit</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://sectools.org/tag/web-scanners/">Web scanners</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://sectools.org/tag/wireless/">Wireless</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://sectools.org/tag/sploits/">Exploitation</a> </ul> </div> <div class="fl-unit"> <h2><a class="nlink" href="https://insecure.org/">About</a></h2> <ul> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://insecure.org/fyodor/">About/Contact</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://insecure.org/privacy.html">Privacy</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://insecure.org/advertising.html">Advertising</a> <li><a class="nlink" href="https://nmap.org/npsl/">Nmap Public Source License</a> </ul> </div> <div class="fl-unit social-links"> <a class="nlink" href="https://twitter.com/nmap" title="Visit us on Twitter"> <img width="32" height="32" src="/shared/images/nst-icons.svg#twitter" alt="" aria-hidden="true"> </a> <a class="nlink" href="https://facebook.com/nmap" title="Visit us on Facebook"> <img width="32" height="32" src="/shared/images/nst-icons.svg#facebook" alt="" aria-hidden="true"> </a> <a class="nlink" href="https://github.com/nmap/" title="Visit us on Github"> <img width="32" height="32" src="/shared/images/nst-icons.svg#github" alt="" aria-hidden="true"> </a> <a class="nlink" href="https://reddit.com/r/nmap/" title="Discuss Nmap on Reddit"> <img width="32" height="32" src="/shared/images/nst-icons.svg#reddit" alt="" aria-hidden="true"> </a> </div> </div> </footer> </div><!-- wrapper --> </body> </html>

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10