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<!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. 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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/2024/q4/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/2024/q4/7">crash report</a></strong> <em>Dmitriy Solodunenko (Oct 31)</em><br> Ubuntu 24.04<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/2024/q4/6">crash</a></strong> <em>Tim Millard (Oct 31)</em><br> Version: 7.94+SVN<br> TypeError: Couldn&apos;t find foreign struct converter for &apos;cairo.Context&apos;<br> <br> Ubuntu 24.04.01<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q4/5">Re: Regarding NMAP Retrigger for snmp-sysdescr</a></strong> <em>Daniel Miller (Oct 31)</em><br> Ramu,<br> <br> Nmap&apos;s snmp-sysdescr script currently uses a 5-second timeout and attempts<br> only once to send the SNMPv1 request. We agree that this could be improved<br> to provide better reliability. I will investigate further and respond again<br> with specific suggestions.<br> <br> Dan<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q4/4">Regarding NMAP Retrigger for snmp-sysdescr</a></strong> <em>Ramu Burra via dev (Oct 31)</em><br> Hi Daniel &amp; NMAP team,<br> <br> I hope this email finds you well.<br> <br> I&apos;m writing to inquire about the specific behaviour of Nmap&apos;s SNMP-SYSDescr query in situations where the target device <br> responds intermittently.<br> <br> I&apos;m particularly interested in knowing if there are any specific configuration options or techniques that can be <br> employed to increase the likelihood of successful SNMP-SYSDescr queries, especially when dealing with...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q4/3">Re: Nmap PR #2909</a></strong> <em>Sinan Doğan (Oct 21)</em><br> thanks<br> <br> Vahagn Vardanian via dev &lt;dev () nmap org&gt;, 17 Eyl 2024 Sal, 18:59 tarihinde<br> şunu yazdı:<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q4/2">Re: NSConnection Probe</a></strong> <em>Harrison Neal (Oct 11)</em><br> Apologies, it looks like the probe suggestion was cut off now that I<br> re-read it.<br> <br> Probe TCP NSConnection_rootProxy...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q4/1">NSConnection Probe</a></strong> <em>Harrison Neal (Oct 11)</em><br> Good day,<br> <br> It appears that nmap doesn&apos;t currently recognize TCP-bound NSConnection (<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://developer.apple.com/documentation/foundation/nsconnection">https://developer.apple.com/documentation/foundation/nsconnection</a> ).<br> <br> Example server code:<br> <br> NSConnection *a = [NSConnection connectionWithReceivePort:[[NSSocketPort<br> alloc] init] sendPort:nil];<br> [a setRootObject:[[NSObject alloc] init]];<br> [a runInNewThread];<br> [NSThread sleepForTimeInterval:300.0f];<br> <br> Example client code:<br> <br> NSLog(@&quot;%@\n&quot;, [[NSConnection...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q4/0">NSE scripts for SNMPv3?</a></strong> <em>Johan Kuuse (Oct 03)</em><br> Hi, my first mail to this list,<br> <br> I have used (and modified) quite a few NSE scripts for SNMP.<br> Anyhow, AFAIK, all SNMP scripts (except &quot;snmp-info&quot;) are limited to SNMPv1<br> and SNMPv2c:<br> <br> nmap --script-help=snmp* | grep -B3 -A1 -i v3<br> ----------------------------------<br> snmp-info<br> Categories: default version safe<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://nmap.org/nsedoc/scripts/snmp-info.html">https://nmap.org/nsedoc/scripts/snmp-info.html</a><br> Extracts basic information from an SNMPv3 GET request. The same probe is<br> used<br> here...<br> </p> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q3/13">Nmap PR #2909</a></strong> <em>Vahagn Vardanian via dev (Sep 17)</em><br> Hello there,<br> My name is Vahagn, and I am the co-founder and CTO of RedRays.<br> A few weeks ago, we created a pull request to Nmap Github to add a new<br> check for detecting the most popular information disclosure in SAP systems.<br> <br> You can get list of SAp systems using this google dork: inurl:/irj/portal<br> Thank you<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q3/12">NPCAP 1.60 high CPU usage with pcap filter that does not pass anything (Win10)</a></strong> <em>Vladimir Soldatov (Sep 17)</em><br> Hi guys,<br> <br> I&apos;ve a setup (Win10, Intel X520, NPCAP 1.60) with relatively high traffic<br> around 700 Mbit/s and I am trying to test the following cases:<br> 1. Capture everything with empty pcap filter and just print stats with some<br> period calculating captured data size<br> 2. Capture nothing with an intentionally created filter that does not match<br> the received traffic at all.<br> 3. Capture some subset of traffic like 10%.<br> <br> In all the cases, CPU usage...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q3/11">[PATCH 1/1] Improved the legibility of `Makefile`</a></strong> <em>Ariel Otilibili (Sep 17)</em><br> * source files obtained by a wildcard<br> * headers and objects generated by differences.<br> <br> ```<br> $ grep -P &apos;(SRCS|HDRS|OBJS) =&apos; Makefile.in | \<br> sed -e &apos;s/^export.*= //g; s/\$.*//g; s/OBJS = //&apos; | \<br> sed -ne &apos;2p&apos; | \<br> tr &apos; &apos; &apos;\n&apos; | \<br> sed -e &apos;s/\.h//&apos; | \<br> sort -d | \<br> grep -vP &apos;^$&apos; &gt; headers<br> <br> $ grep -P &apos;(SRCS|HDRS|OBJS) =&apos; Makefile.in | \<br> sed -e...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q3/10">[PATCH 0/1] Improved the legibility of Makefile</a></strong> <em>Ariel Otilibili (Sep 17)</em><br> Hello committers,<br> <br> The same patch is on this PR: <a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2938">https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2938</a><br> <br> Have a good weekend,<br> Ariel<br> <br> Ariel Otilibili (1):<br> Improved the legibility of `Makefile`<br> <br> Makefile.in | 14 +++-----------<br> 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-)<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q3/9">How to make a minimal HTTPS request with ncat --ssl with explicit HTTP content?</a></strong> <em>Ciro Santilli OurBigBook via dev (Sep 17)</em><br> Hello, I was trying for fun to make an HTTPS request with explicit hand-written HTTP content.<br> <br> Something analogous to:<br> <br> printf &apos;GET / HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: example.com\r\n\r\n&apos; | ncat example.com 80<br> <br> but for HTTPS. After Googling one of the tools that I found that seemed it might do the job was ncat from the nmap <br> project, so I tried:<br> <br> printf &apos;GET / HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: example.com\r\n\r\n&apos; | ncat --ssl example.com 443<br> <br> an that works...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q3/8">[PATCH 1/1] Updated ALPN IDs</a></strong> <em>Ariel Otilibili (Sep 15)</em><br> ```<br> $ URL=<a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-extensiontype-values/alpn-protocol-ids.csv">https://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-extensiontype-values/alpn-protocol-ids.csv</a><br> $ curl -sL ${URL} |<br> perl -nE &apos;say $&amp; if /(?&lt;=\&quot;\&quot;).*(?=\&quot;\&quot;)/&apos; |<br> sort &gt; iana;<br> &lt; scripts/tls-alpn.nse perl -nE &apos;say $&amp; if m!(?&lt;=&quot;)[\w/\.\-]+(?=&quot;,)!&apos; |<br> sort &gt; nmap.alpn;<br> diff iana nmap.alpn | grep &apos;&lt;&apos;<br> <br> &lt; co<br> &lt; postgresql<br> <br> $ curl --silent ${URL} --output...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2024/q3/7">[PATCH 0/1] Updated ALPN IDs (Mon, 26 Aug 2024 17:55:25 GMT)</a></strong> <em>Ariel Otilibili (Sep 15)</em><br> Hello,<br> <br> Herewith the PR containing this patch: <a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2939">https://github.com/nmap/nmap/pull/2939</a><br> <br> Have a good week,<br> Ariel<br> <br> Ariel Otilibili (1):<br> Updated ALPN IDs<br> <br> scripts/tls-alpn.nse | 2 ++<br> 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)<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">Current 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/2024/Nov/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/2024/Nov/16">APPLE-SA-11-19-2024-5 macOS Sequoia 15.1.1</a></strong> <em>Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure (Nov 21)</em><br> APPLE-SA-11-19-2024-5 macOS Sequoia 15.1.1<br> <br> macOS Sequoia 15.1.1 addresses the following issues.<br> Information about the security content is also available at<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.apple.com/121753">https://support.apple.com/121753</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> JavaScriptCore<br> Available for: macOS Sequoia<br> Impact: Processing maliciously crafted web content may lead to arbitrary...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/15">Local Privilege Escalations in needrestart</a></strong> <em>Qualys Security Advisory via Fulldisclosure (Nov 21)</em><br> Qualys Security Advisory<br> <br> LPEs in needrestart (CVE-2024-48990, CVE-2024-48991, CVE-2024-48992,<br> CVE-2024-10224, and CVE-2024-11003)<br> <br> ========================================================================<br> Contents<br> ========================================================================<br> <br> Summary<br> Background<br> CVE-2024-48990 (and CVE-2024-48992)<br> CVE-2024-48991<br> CVE-2024-10224 (and CVE-2024-11003)<br> Mitigation<br> Acknowledgments<br> Timeline<br> <br> I got bugs...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/14">APPLE-SA-11-19-2024-4 iOS 17.7.2 and iPadOS 17.7.2</a></strong> <em>Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure (Nov 21)</em><br> APPLE-SA-11-19-2024-4 iOS 17.7.2 and iPadOS 17.7.2<br> <br> iOS 17.7.2 and iPadOS 17.7.2 addresses the following issues.<br> Information about the security content is also available at<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.apple.com/121754">https://support.apple.com/121754</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> JavaScriptCore<br> Available for: iPhone XS and later, iPad Pro 13-inch, iPad Pro 12.9-inch<br> 2nd generation...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/13">APPLE-SA-11-19-2024-3 iOS 18.1.1 and iPadOS 18.1.1</a></strong> <em>Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure (Nov 21)</em><br> APPLE-SA-11-19-2024-3 iOS 18.1.1 and iPadOS 18.1.1<br> <br> iOS 18.1.1 and iPadOS 18.1.1 addresses the following issues.<br> Information about the security content is also available at<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.apple.com/121752">https://support.apple.com/121752</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> JavaScriptCore<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/2024/Nov/12">APPLE-SA-11-19-2024-2 visionOS 2.1.1</a></strong> <em>Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure (Nov 21)</em><br> APPLE-SA-11-19-2024-2 visionOS 2.1.1<br> <br> visionOS 2.1.1 addresses the following issues.<br> Information about the security content is also available at<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.apple.com/121755">https://support.apple.com/121755</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> JavaScriptCore<br> Available for: Apple Vision Pro<br> Impact: Processing maliciously crafted web content may lead to arbitrary<br> code...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/11">APPLE-SA-11-19-2024-1 Safari 18.1.1</a></strong> <em>Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure (Nov 21)</em><br> APPLE-SA-11-19-2024-1 Safari 18.1.1<br> <br> Safari 18.1.1 addresses the following issues.<br> Information about the security content is also available at<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://support.apple.com/121756">https://support.apple.com/121756</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> JavaScriptCore<br> Available for: macOS Ventura and macOS Sonoma<br> Impact: Processing maliciously crafted web content may lead to...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/10">Reflected XSS - fronsetiav1.1</a></strong> <em>Andrey Stoykov (Nov 21)</em><br> # Exploit Title: Reflected XSS - fronsetiav1.1<br> # Date: 11/2024<br> # Exploit Author: Andrey Stoykov<br> # Version: 1.1<br> # Tested on: Debian 12<br> # Blog:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://msecureltd.blogspot.com/2024/11/friday-fun-pentest-series-14-reflected.html">https://msecureltd.blogspot.com/2024/11/friday-fun-pentest-series-14-reflected.html</a><br> <br> Reflected XSS #1 - &quot;show_operations.jsp&quot;<br> <br> Steps to Reproduce:<br> <br> 1. Visit main page of the application.<br> 2. In the input field of &quot;WSDL Location&quot; enter the following payload &quot;&gt;&lt;img<br> src=x...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/9">XXE OOB - fronsetiav1.1</a></strong> <em>Andrey Stoykov (Nov 21)</em><br> # Exploit Title: XXE OOB - fronsetiav1.1<br> # Date: 11/2024<br> # Exploit Author: Andrey Stoykov<br> # Version: 1.1<br> # Tested on: Debian 12<br> # Blog:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://msecureltd.blogspot.com/2024/11/friday-fun-pentest-series-15-oob-xxe.html">https://msecureltd.blogspot.com/2024/11/friday-fun-pentest-series-15-oob-xxe.html</a><br> <br> XXE OOB<br> <br> Description:<br> <br> - It was found that the application was vulnerable XXE (XML External Entity<br> Injection)<br> <br> Steps to Reproduce:<br> <br> 1. Add Python3 server to serve malicious XXE payload<br> 2. Add a file on the file system to be read...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/8">St. Poelten UAS | Path Traversal in Korenix JetPort 5601</a></strong> <em>Weber Thomas via Fulldisclosure (Nov 21)</em><br> St. Pölten UAS 20241118-1<br> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br> title| Path Traversal<br> product| Korenix JetPort 5601<br> vulnerable version| 1.2<br> fixed version| -<br> CVE number| CVE-2024-11303<br> impact| High<br> homepage| <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.korenix.com/">https://www.korenix.com/</a><br> found| 2024-05-24<br> by| P. Oberndorfer, B. Tösch, M....<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/7">St. Poelten UAS | Multiple Stored Cross-Site Scripting in SEH utnserver Pro</a></strong> <em>Weber Thomas via Fulldisclosure (Nov 21)</em><br> St. Pölten UAS 20241118-0<br> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br> title| Multiple Stored Cross-Site Scripting<br> product| SEH utnserver Pro<br> vulnerable version| 20.1.22<br> fixed version| 20.1.35<br> CVE number| CVE-2024-11304<br> impact| High<br> homepage| <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.seh-technology.com/">https://www.seh-technology.com/</a><br> found| 2024-05-24<br> by| P....<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/6">Apple web content filter bypass allows unrestricted access to blocked content (macOS/iOS/iPadOS/visionOS/watchOS)</a></strong> <em>Nosebeard Labs (Nov 21)</em><br> Dear colleagues,<br> <br> Nosebeard Labs is pleased to share its latest advisory, detailing a <br> bypass of Apple&apos;s system wide web content filter. The HTML version of <br> this advisory is also available at:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://nosebeard.co/advisories/nbl-001.html">https://nosebeard.co/advisories/nbl-001.html</a><br> <br> Warmest regards,<br> Nosebeard Labs<br> <br> ## Summary<br> Nosebeard Labs Security Advisory NBL-001<br> Title: Apple web content filter bypass allows unrestricted access to <br> blocked content...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/5">SEC Consult SA-20241112-0 :: Multiple vulnerabilities in Siemens Energy Omnivise T3000 (CVE-2024-38876, CVE-2024-38877, CVE-2024-38878, CVE-2024-38879)</a></strong> <em>SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab via Fulldisclosure (Nov 12)</em><br> SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory &lt; 20241112-0 &gt;<br> =======================================================================<br> title: Multiple vulnerabilities<br> product: Siemens Energy Omnivise T3000<br> vulnerable version: &gt;=8.2 SP3<br> fixed version: see solution section<br> CVE number: CVE-2024-38876, CVE-2024-38877, CVE-2024-38878, CVE-2024-38879<br> impact: High...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/4">Security issue in the TX Text Control .NET Server for ASP.NET.</a></strong> <em>Filip Palian (Nov 12)</em><br> Hej,<br> <br> Let&apos;s keep it short ...<br> <br> =====<br> <br> Intro<br> <br> =====<br> <br> A &quot;sudo make me a sandwich&quot; security issue has been identified in the TX<br> Text<br> <br> Control .NET Server for ASP.NET[1].<br> <br> According to the vendor[2], &quot;the most powerful, MS Word compatible document<br> <br> editor that runs in all browsers&quot;.<br> <br> Likely all versions are affected however, it was not confirmed.<br> <br> =====<br> <br> Issue<br> <br> =====<br> <br> It was possible to change the configured system path for...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/3">SEC Consult SA-20241107-0 :: Multiple Vulnerabilities in HASOMED Elefant and Elefant Software Updater</a></strong> <em>SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab via Fulldisclosure (Nov 09)</em><br> SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory &lt; 20241107-0 &gt;<br> =======================================================================<br> title: Multiple Vulnerabilities<br> product: HASOMED Elefant and Elefant Software Updater<br> vulnerable version: &lt;24.04.00, Elefant Software Updater &lt;1.4.2.1811<br> fixed version: 24.04.00, Elefant Software Updater 1.4.2.1811<br> CVE number: CVE-2024-50588,...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2024/Nov/2">Unsafe eval() in TestRail CLI</a></strong> <em>Devin Cook (Nov 06)</em><br> This is not a very exciting vulnerability, but I had already publicly disclosed<br> it on GitHub at the request of the vendor. Since that report has disappeared,<br> the link I had provided to MITRE was invalid, so here it is again.<br> <br> -Devin<br> <br> ---<br> <br> # Unsafe `eval()` in TestRail CLI FieldsParser<br> <br> Date Reported: 2024-10-03<br> CVSSv3.1 Score: 7.3<br> CVSSv3.1 Vector: AV:L/AC:L/PR:L/UI:R/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:H<br> Severity: Medium<br> Vulnerability Class: Eval Injection<br> <br> ## Summary...<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/2024/q4/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/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 --> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/13">Developing Clairvoyance</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Sep 30)</em><br> As you know, humans like to invent comfort words. One of my favorites is<br> &quot;luck&quot;. The theory being that yes, the universe has dice, but they are<br> loaded in your favor. Properly used, these words are a spell - they allow<br> us to have courage when a sober mind would quail. But when you become a<br> professional, you have to give up these crutches. Only poor poker players<br> believe in &quot;luck&quot;.<br> <br> In computer science, and especially in machine...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/12">Re: sboms and LLMs</a></strong> <em>Adrian Sanabria via Dailydave (Sep 12)</em><br> We&apos;ve been talking about and giving &quot;Beyond the SBOM&quot; presentations for a<br> while now, but to your point, I don&apos;t see anyone actually doing it.<br> <br> If Solarwinds said &quot;here&apos;s a script that will lock down your host firewall<br> to just the outbound access our tools need to update themselves&quot;, that<br> would be amazing, and would have saved everyone some time and trouble a few<br> years ago.<br> <br> [image: image.png]<br> And Biden&apos;s EO...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/11">Re: sboms and LLMs</a></strong> <em>Isaac Dawson via Dailydave (Sep 12)</em><br> Well this is rather timely! Although I&apos;m not sure using an LLM for the<br> behavioral aspect is entirely necessary. I&apos;ve been working on an<br> experimental system that does just what you talk about for dependencies (<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/application_security/dependency_scanning/experiment_libbehave_dependency.html">https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/application_security/dependency_scanning/experiment_libbehave_dependency.html</a>,<br> pre-alpha!). My solution uses static analysis because I&apos;m a fan of<br> determinism.<br> <br> Snark aside, looking at behaviors...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/10">sboms and LLMs</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Sep 11)</em><br> People doing software security often use LLMs more as orchestrators than<br> anything else. But there&apos;s so many more complicated ways to use them in our<br> space coming down the pipe. Obviously the next evolution of SBOMs<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.cisa.gov/resources-tools/resources/cisa-sbom-rama">https://www.cisa.gov/resources-tools/resources/cisa-sbom-rama</a>&gt; is that<br> they represent not just what is contained in the code as some static tree<br> of library dependencies, but also what that code does in a summary fashion...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/9">Re: Persistence and Strategic Effects</a></strong> <em>the grugq via Dailydave (Aug 16)</em><br> Cyber is Calvinball.<br> <br> I gave a talk back in 2015 [1] which I think has held up rather well. My argument was that cyber is evolving in <br> unpredictable ways as we learn more about the domain. That the current state of the art has huge blind spots we aren’t <br> even thinking about. The next year was, of course, the 2016 disinformation campaign fed by cyber loot.<br> <br> I feel that a great deal of cyber war literature is based on knowledge derived from...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/8">Persistence and Strategic Effects</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Aug 15)</em><br> Before there were words, calculated as the softmax of a list of possible<br> tokens, there were just vectors of nano-electrical potential in cells<br> soaked in a hormonal brew of electrolytes, operating on a clock cycle of<br> &quot;slow, but fast enough&quot;. In this sense, as we now know<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10472538/">https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10472538/</a>&gt;, we generate words<br> and we know, in our heads, what we are, in the same way as we generate<br> limbs, with each...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/7">Re: &quot;Exploitation Less Likely&quot;</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Aug 13)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/CloudCrowSec001/CVE-2024-38077-POC/blob/main/CVE-2024-38077.md">https://github.com/CloudCrowSec001/CVE-2024-38077-POC/blob/main/CVE-2024-38077.md</a><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/Wlibang/CVE-2024-38077/blob/main/One%20bug%20to%20Rule%20Them%20All%2C%20Exploiting%20a%20Preauth%20RCE%20vulnerability%20on%20Windows%20">https://github.com/Wlibang/CVE-2024-38077/blob/main/One%20bug%20to%20Rule%20Them%20All%2C%20Exploiting%20a%20Preauth%20RCE%20vulnerability%20on%20Windows%20</a>(2024_8_9%2010_59_06).html<br> <br> But while you are at it, always good to watch a video for no reason:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mVXrl4W1jOU">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mVXrl4W1jOU</a><br> <br> -dave<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/6">Re: &quot;Exploitation Less Likely&quot;</a></strong> <em>Don A. Bailey via Dailydave (Aug 13)</em><br> <br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/5">&quot;Exploitation Less Likely&quot;</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Aug 12)</em><br> DefCon is a study in cacophony, and like many of you I&apos;m still digging<br> through my backlog of new research in multifarious browser tabs, the way a<br> dragonfly keeps track of the world through scintillated compound lenses. In<br> between AIxCC (which proved, if anything, the boundaries<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="https://dashboard.aicyberchallenge.com/collectivesolvehealth">https://dashboard.aicyberchallenge.com/collectivesolvehealth</a>&gt; of automated<br> bug finding using current LLM tech?), James Kettle&apos;s timing attack research...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/4">PRANA Hack and Leak Report Release</a></strong> <em>Dave Aitel via Dailydave (Aug 02)</em><br> Cordyceps Analysis Report on PRANA Network Hack and Leak Operation:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1oOJbBTUwyK85ZKYAAdwWqxk-sMvqrBqzJYX1oziTFu4/edit?usp=sharing">https://docs.google.com/document/d/1oOJbBTUwyK85ZKYAAdwWqxk-sMvqrBqzJYX1oziTFu4/edit?usp=sharing</a><br> <br> Lately I&apos;ve been reading a lot of academic papers, mostly the Research<br> Handbook on Cyberwarfare<br> &lt;<a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.elgaronline.com/edcollchap/book/9781803924854/book-part-9781803924854-6.xml">https://www.elgaronline.com/edcollchap/book/9781803924854/book-part-9781803924854-6.xml</a>&gt;.<br> Some of them are good papers! JD Work has a paper in it! But also some of<br> them get...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/3">Re: LLMs and refusals</a></strong> <em>David Manouchehri via Dailydave (Jul 28)</em><br> Breaking down a prompt into multiple steps works pretty well for us. e.g.<br> first we get generic mean reasons:<br> <br> [image: image.png]<br> <br> Then I just shove the mean reasons into the system message (you can do this<br> with another LLM call instead in real life, I just cheated by copy pasting<br> since there&apos;s already too many screenshots in this email):<br> <br> [image: image.png]<br> <br> This is with gpt-4o-2024-05-13 above, but you can see below it works with<br> Llama 3.1...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/dailydave/2024/q3/2">Re: LLMs and refusals</a></strong> <em>Jason Ross via Dailydave (Jul 25)</em><br> It&apos;s likely this is going to happen anyway, the new Mistral just dropped<br> and seems to perform roughly on par with llama3 and gpt4o, so the next wave<br> of fine tuned versions like dolphin are almost certainly coming soon.<br> <br> OpenAI also has announced free fine tuning of gpt4o mini until late<br> September (up to 2m tokens/day) so it may be possible to fine tune around<br> some of its guardrails for a reasonable cost.<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; 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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/2023/index.html"><img src="/images/current-icon-16x16.png" width=16 height=16 alt="Current period icon">Previous Year</a> <li><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/2024/q4/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/2024/q4/126">Multiple vulnerabilities in Jenkins and Jenkins plugins</a></strong> <em>Daniel Beck (Nov 27)</em><br> Jenkins is an open source automation server which enables developers around<br> the world to reliably build, test, and deploy their software.<br> <br> The following releases contain fixes for security vulnerabilities:<br> <br> * Jenkins 2.487<br> * Jenkins LTS 2.479.2<br> * Filesystem List Parameter Plugin 0.0.15<br> * Simple Queue Plugin 1.4.5<br> <br> Summaries of the vulnerabilities are below. More details, severity, and<br> attribution can be found here:...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/125">WebKitGTK and WPE WebKit Security Advisory WSA-2024-0007</a></strong> <em>Adrian Perez de Castro (Nov 27)</em><br> ------------------------------------------------------------------------<br> WebKitGTK and WPE WebKit Security Advisory WSA-2024-0007<br> ------------------------------------------------------------------------<br> <br> Date reported : November 27, 2024<br> Advisory ID : WSA-2024-0007<br> WebKitGTK Advisory URL : <a rel="nofollow" href="https://webkitgtk.org/security/WSA-2024-0007.html">https://webkitgtk.org/security/WSA-2024-0007.html</a><br> WPE WebKit Advisory URL :...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/124">authentik: remote timing attack in MetricsView HTTP Basic Auth (CVE-2024-52307)</a></strong> <em>Matthias Gerstner (Nov 27)</em><br> Hello list,<br> <br> this report is about a remote timing attack in Authentik [1]. Authentik is a<br> popular open source identity provider that can be self-hosted. SUSE IT is<br> considering to use this software internally in the future and thus we have<br> been asked to have a look at its security.<br> <br> The Authentik version we examined was 2024.8.3. Beyond the finding in this<br> report, we also discovered the possibility to access SSL private keys without...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/123">Re: Local Privilege Escalations in needrestart</a></strong> <em>Mark Esler (Nov 26)</em><br> The security fix for CVE-2024-48991, 6ce6136 (“core: prevent race<br> condition on /proc/$PID/exec evaluation”) [0], introduced a regression<br> which was subsequently fixed 42af5d3 (&quot;core: fix regression of false<br> positives for processes running in chroot or mountns (#317)&quot;) [1].<br> <br> Many thanks to Ivan Kurnosov and Salvatore Bonaccorso for their review.<br> <br> [0] <a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/liske/needrestart/commit/6ce6136cccc307c6b8a0f8cae12f9a22ac2aad59">https://github.com/liske/needrestart/commit/6ce6136cccc307c6b8a0f8cae12f9a22ac2aad59</a>...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/122">CVE-2024-51569: Apache NimBLE: Lack of input sanitization leading to out-of-bound reads in Number of Completed Packets HCI event handler</a></strong> <em>Szymon Janc (Nov 26)</em><br> Severity: low<br> <br> Affected versions:<br> <br> - Apache NimBLE through 1.7.0<br> <br> Description:<br> <br> Out-of-bounds Read vulnerability in Apache NimBLE.<br> <br> Missing proper validation of HCI Number Of Completed Packets could lead to out-of-bound access when parsing HCI event <br> and invalid read from HCI transport memory.<br> This issue requires broken or bogus Bluetooth controller and thus severity is considered low.<br> This issue affects Apache NimBLE: through 1.7.0.<br> <br> Users are...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/121">CVE-2024-47250: Apache NimBLE: Lack of input validation in HCI advertising report could lead to potential out-of-bound access</a></strong> <em>Szymon Janc (Nov 26)</em><br> Severity: low<br> <br> Affected versions:<br> <br> - Apache NimBLE through 1.7.0<br> <br> Description:<br> <br> Out-of-bounds Read vulnerability in Apache NimBLE.<br> <br> Missing proper validation of HCI advertising report could lead to out-of-bound access when parsing HCI event and thus <br> bogus GAP &apos;device found&apos; events being sent.<br> This issue requires broken or bogus Bluetooth controller and thus severity is considered low.<br> This issue affects Apache NimBLE: through 1.7.0....<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/120">CVE-2024-47249: Apache NimBLE: Lack of input sanitization leading to out-of-bound reads in multiple advertisement handler</a></strong> <em>Szymon Janc (Nov 26)</em><br> Severity: low<br> <br> Affected versions:<br> <br> - Apache NimBLE through 1.7.0<br> <br> Description:<br> <br> Improper Validation of Array Index vulnerability in Apache NimBLE.<br> <br> Lack of input validation for HCI events from controller could result in out-of-bound memory corruption and crash.<br> This issue requires broken or bogus Bluetooth controller and thus severity is considered low.<br> This issue affects Apache NimBLE: through 1.7.0.<br> <br> Users are recommended to upgrade to version...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/119">CVE-2024-47248: Apache NimBLE: Buffer overflow in NimBLE MESH Bluetooth stack</a></strong> <em>Szymon Janc (Nov 26)</em><br> Severity: important<br> <br> Affected versions:<br> <br> - Apache NimBLE through 1.7.0<br> <br> Description:<br> <br> Buffer Copy without Checking Size of Input (&apos;Classic Buffer Overflow&apos;) vulnerability in Apache NimBLE.<br> <br> Specially crafted MESH message could result in memory corruption when non-default build configuration is used.<br> This issue affects Apache NimBLE: through 1.7.0.<br> <br> Users are recommended to upgrade to version 1.8.0, which fixes the issue.<br> <br> Credit:<br> <br> Wei...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/118">Re: Article: State of Sandboxing in Linux</a></strong> <em>Ali Polatel (Nov 25)</em><br> Your argument makes no sense and makes me believe you&apos;re either ignorant<br> or borderline trolling, however I&apos;ll try one last time:<br> <br> Here is a comprehensive list of technologies that sydbox uses:<br> 1. seccomp-bpf<br> 2. seccomp-unotify<br> 3. landlock<br> 4. namespaces (including user namespaces)<br> 5. ptrace<br> 6. MDWE<br> <br> Out of the technologies listed above only ptrace is considerably<br> older to the point you can consider it &quot;pre-containerization&quot;....<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/117">Re: Article: State of Sandboxing in Linux</a></strong> <em>Evan Carroll (Nov 25)</em><br> Historically, there were 10,000 different ways to sandbox things. From<br> chroots, to firejails. I however don&apos;t understand why anyone would<br> entertain any of these pre-containerization methods today. That&apos;s why I&apos;m<br> questioning what&apos;s the purpose of comparing different sandboxing methods in<br> isolation of the current status quo -- containerization. Why would anyone<br> want sydbox (whatever it is) over rootless podman?<br> <br> By the way, you...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/116">Re: Article: State of Sandboxing in Linux</a></strong> <em>Ali Polatel (Nov 25)</em><br> Thank you!<br> <br> Thank you for taking the time to explain this. It makes more sense now.<br> Hiding paths is a feature i work on sydbox as well. Our main goal with<br> this, however, is not really security, rather we want to ensure each and every<br> package build can only &quot;see&quot; the files it depends on (directly or indirectly).<br> This is going to effectively prevent automagic dependencies[1] at sandbox level<br> and bring us one step closer to hermetic builds...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/115">Re: Article: State of Sandboxing in Linux</a></strong> <em>Ali Polatel (Nov 25)</em><br> You&apos;re comparing apples and oranges. podman is a container engine that gives<br> you isolation. You can use a sandboxing solution on top, such as gVisor or<br> syd-oci to provide a security boundary.<br> <br> I appreciate your feedback regardless. I can see how the article may have been<br> confusing for you. However that confusion stems from an important misunderstanding:<br> Namespaces provide isolation, not necessarily security.<br> <br> Best regards,<br> Ali Polatel<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/114">Re: Article: State of Sandboxing in Linux</a></strong> <em>Eli Schwartz (Nov 25)</em><br> You might want &quot;sydbox&quot;, though I wouldn&apos;t know.<br> <br> I can definitely tell you that you do not want Gentoo&apos;s sandbox, which<br> isn&apos;t a security technology at all. It&apos;s an LD_PRELOAD mechanism, and<br> thus easily defeated by malicious software, which assumes that it is<br> being used as a &quot;sandbox&quot; for innocent software that is perhaps badly<br> written to run inside, and interjects code on regular file accesses to<br> check...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/113">Re: Article: State of Sandboxing in Linux</a></strong> <em>Evan Carroll (Nov 24)</em><br> A lot of words on that one,<br> <br> Not sure if you&apos;re the author of the paper. But off the get go, I&apos;m<br> extremely confused. I wanted to give my critique on the paper instead of<br> the technology. My experience with &quot;user-space sandboxing&quot; is kernel<br> user-namespaces. My interface to them is podman. It&apos;s not clear what this<br> &quot;sandbox&quot; offers that podman&apos;s rootless mode does not. I believe I&apos;m in the<br> majority with...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2024/q4/112">Re: Article: State of Sandboxing in Linux</a></strong> <em>Mickaël Salaün (Nov 24)</em><br> Nice article! I somehow miss this email...<br> <br> This is neither a bug nor a feature, but a current limitation<br> highlighted in the documentation:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://docs.kernel.org/userspace-api/landlock.html#filesystem-flags">https://docs.kernel.org/userspace-api/landlock.html#filesystem-flags</a><br> This limitation is due to the current path-based LSM hooks (e.g. also<br> used by AppArmor and Tomoyo), but we plan to address that:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://github.com/landlock-lsm/linux/issues/9">https://github.com/landlock-lsm/linux/issues/9</a><br> <br> Sandboxer tools using Landlock may mislead users to think this...<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/2024/Nov/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/2024/Nov/276">RE: Can an IXP sell IP transit?</a></strong> <em>Kevin McCormick (Nov 27)</em><br> Bi-Lateral benefit is for when there is an issue with the route servers.<br> <br> Example, Equinix IBX Chicago changed filtering policies shortly after ARIN introduced the new IRR database.<br> <br> If your BGP peered customers had not created new entries in the new IRR database their routes were dropped.<br> <br> This dumped a lot of IX traffic for us other than the few bi-laterals we had established.<br> <br> We called all our BGP peered customers that day and they quickly...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/275">Re: 2 undersea cables cut</a></strong> <em>Ge DUPIN (Nov 27)</em><br> Right Mark !<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.linkedin.com/posts/europeansubseacablesassociation_two-subsea-cables-located-in-the-baltic-sea-activity-7265099222381727746-8xFX/?utm_source=share&amp;utm_medium=member_desktop">https://www.linkedin.com/posts/europeansubseacablesassociation_two-subsea-cables-located-in-the-baltic-sea-activity-7265099222381727746-8xFX/?utm_source=share&amp;utm_medium=member_desktop</a><br> European Subsea Cables Association sur LinkedIn : Two subsea cables located in the Baltic Sea have recently reported <br> faults.… | 18 commentaires<br> linkedin.com...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/274">We Are So Grateful for Our Community! + More</a></strong> <em>Nanog News (Nov 27)</em><br> *** Happy Thanksgiving!*<br> ------------------------------------------------------------<br> *We Are So Grateful for Our Community*<br> <br> Your dedication, collaboration, and innovation keep the Internet running<br> smoothly and our world more connected. 💡🌍<br> <br> Wishing you and your loved ones a joyful and restful holiday. Happy<br> Thanksgiving! 🧡<br> <br> ***Deadline for N93 Talk Proposals is Just Around the Corner... *...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/273">Re: ATT Voice Call Routing Issues</a></strong> <em>John Alcock (Nov 27)</em><br> We are seeing problems from AT&amp;T. We believe it specifically from AT&amp;T<br> mobile. About 15 to 20% of the calls are one-way audio.<br> <br> John<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/272">Re: ATT Voice Call Routing Issues</a></strong> <em>Mike Hammett (Nov 27)</em><br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops">https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops</a> <br> <br> ----- <br> Mike Hammett <br> Intelligent Computing Solutions <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.ics-il.com">http://www.ics-il.com</a> <br> <br> Midwest-IX <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.midwest-ix.com">http://www.midwest-ix.com</a> <br> <br> ----- Original Message -----<br> <br> From: &quot;John Stitt&quot; &lt;jstitt () hop-electric com&gt; <br> To: &quot;NANOG&quot; &lt;nanog () nanog org&gt; <br> Sent: Tuesday, November 26, 2024 6:57:02 PM <br> Subject: ATT Voice Call Routing Issues <br> <br> Anyone on the ATT voice side of things able to...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/271">ATT Voice Call Routing Issues</a></strong> <em>John Stitt (Nov 26)</em><br> Anyone on the ATT voice side of things able to reach out off list?<br> <br> We’re seeing inbound call issues from AT&amp;T and firstnet phone numbers across multiple providers. Outbound calls have no <br> issue. <br> <br> So far we’ve had no success with normal channels of support. <br> <br> The calls are dropping after five seconds, but they do initially make it through and you can have a few seconds of <br> audio if you answer quick enough. If you don’t answer, you’re...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/270">Re: Chairman of Senate Intelligence Committee calls salt typhoon &quot;worst telecom hack in our nation&apos;s history&quot;</a></strong> <em>joel (Nov 26)</em><br> How could they have possibly hacked an intentional backdoor!? No. Get out.<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/269">Re: Chairman of Senate Intelligence Committee calls salt typhoon &quot;worst telecom hack in our nation&apos;s history&quot;</a></strong> <em>Christopher Morrow (Nov 26)</em><br> Uhm, which of course &apos;no one saw coming&apos;...<br> <br> also, this very same thing played out a tad smaller (maybe? no one<br> really fessed up) in ~2002-3?<br> admittedly the person that MAY NOT have just been a patsy for some<br> other larger thing (nation-state-actor) but.. we probably won&apos;t know.<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/268">Re: Carrier Ethernet Demarc</a></strong> <em>Mark Tinka (Nov 25)</em><br> I think the issue here is maximizing the fibre expense, especially if <br> it&apos;s 10km or longer. If the cost of 25G, 40G and 100G is all within the <br> same ballpark, 100G will make the most sense. But getting 100G beyond <br> 10km without amplification and dispersion compensation means you will <br> need to go coherent.<br> <br> NRZ-based 100G-ZR4 says it will do 80km, but real life has shown things <br> can be vastly different, primarily due to generally poor fibre...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/267">Re: Carrier Ethernet Demarc</a></strong> <em>John Stitt (Nov 25)</em><br> I appreciate all the responses so far.<br> <br> Indeed, the customer handoff side of the equation is where I’ve been having trouble finding options. The Cisco <br> (formerly Accedian) solution was one I hadn’t seen in my searching, so that at least gives me one competitive option to <br> the Adva.<br> <br> From what I’ve found and what I’m hearing, I think everyone is correct that much like 40Gb, there just hasn’t been as <br> much call for 25Gb handoff at...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/266">Re: Carrier Ethernet Demarc</a></strong> <em>Mark Tinka (Nov 25)</em><br> 1U routers that support 25G have been on the market for a little while <br> now. I don&apos;t think this is the issue.<br> <br> What has been lacking is a Layer 2 25G demarc. box, and Adva are just <br> about the only vendor who have had one for some time, as the OP mentioned.<br> <br> Outside the data centre, the primary customers for 25G has been mobile <br> operators. With 100G-ZR+ coherent now starting to ship from next month, <br> I suspect this will put 25G RAN backhaul...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/265">Re: Carrier Ethernet Demarc</a></strong> <em>Jesse DuPont (Nov 25)</em><br> &lt;&lt;&lt; text/html: EXCLUDED &gt;&gt;&gt;<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/264">Chairman of Senate Intelligence Committee calls salt typhoon &quot;worst telecom hack in our nation&apos;s history&quot;</a></strong> <em>Eric Kuhnke (Nov 25)</em><br> Re: compromise of lawful intercept / CALEA related features:<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://archive.is/jZt59">https://archive.is/jZt59</a><br> <br> Original URL:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2024/11/21/salt-typhoon-china-hack-telecom/">https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2024/11/21/salt-typhoon-china-hack-telecom/</a><br> <br> *The hackers, part of a group dubbed Salt Typhoon, have been able to listen<br> in on audio calls in real time and have in some cases moved from one<br> telecom network to another, exploiting relationships of “trust,” said Sen.<br> Mark R. Warner (D-Virginia),...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/263">Re: Carrier Ethernet Demarc</a></strong> <em>Eric Kuhnke (Nov 25)</em><br> While options exist such as the Cisco 9500 series mentioned by Fredy, for<br> 25 Gbps, I don&apos;t know that it has ever caught on for WAN purposes to find<br> its way into carrier demarc equipment. as a common optio. Or as a service<br> tier that major lit service last-mile providers are interested in providing<br> their sales team as a standard product to sell.<br> <br> The bulk of the equipment and use case I&apos;ve seen for it is as a LAN top of<br> rack switch for...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/nanog/2024/Nov/262">Re: Carrier Ethernet Demarc</a></strong> <em>Fredy Kuenzler (Nov 25)</em><br> We are using for our Switzerland-wide FTTH (Point-to-Point topology) the Cisco 9500 series. Our product is called <br> «Ethernet7» and delivers the services you describe using EVPN-VXLAN, providing 1/10/25 Gbps and 100 Gbps NNI.<br> <br> <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.init7.net/en/offer/ethernet7-carrier-ethernet-service-ces/">https://www.init7.net/en/offer/ethernet7-carrier-ethernet-service-ces/</a><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/2024/q4/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/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 --> <!-- MHonArc v2.6.19 --> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/risks/2024/q3/10">Risks Digest 34.45</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Sep 14)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Saturday 14 Sep 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 45<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/34.45">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.45</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/q3/9">Risks Digest 34.44</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Sep 08)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Sunday 8 Sep 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 44<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/34.44">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.44</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/q3/8">Risks Digest 34.43</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Aug 29)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Thursday 29 Aug 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 43<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/34.43">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.43</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/q3/7">Risks Digest 34.42</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Aug 26)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Monday 26 Aug 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 42<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/34.42">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.42</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/q3/6">Risks Digest 34.41</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Aug 24)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Saturday 24 Aug 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 41<br> <br> ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS<br> (comp.risks)<br> Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator<br> <br> ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats,<br> 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/34.41">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.41</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/q3/5">Risks Digest 34.40</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Aug 14)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Wednesday 14 Aug 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 40<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/34.40">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.40</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/q3/4">Risks Digest 34.39</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Aug 03)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Saturday 3 Aug 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 39<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/34.39">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.39</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/q3/3">Risks Digest 34.38</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Jul 29)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Monday 29 Jul 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 38<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/34.38">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.38</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/q3/2">Risks Digest 34.37</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Jul 25)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Thursday 25 Jul 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 37<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/34.37">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.37</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/q3/1">Risks Digest 34.36</a></strong> <em>RISKS List Owner (Jul 21)</em><br> RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Sunday 21 Jul 2024 Volume 34 : Issue 36<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/34.36">http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.36</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/2024/q4/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/2024/q4/35">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2024-11-26</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Nov 26)</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> malware-cnc, policy-other 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/2024/q4/34">Snort VRT rule Consulting</a></strong> <em>林馨 via Snort-sigs (Nov 21)</em><br> Hello, I want to buy Snort VRT rules, but I have purchased Proofpoint ET<br> Pro, whose rule set contains snort rules, and I am not sure whether the<br> rules in Proofpoint ET Pro include Snort VRT<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2024/q4/33">Snort 2025 Wall Calendars are available now!</a></strong> <em>Brendan Bell (brebell) via Snort-sigs (Nov 21)</em><br> The 2025 Snort Calendar has arrived! This year’s theme is Video Games! To get your copy of the 2025 Snort Calendar, <br> fill out our short survey here: <a rel="nofollow" href="https://ciscocx.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_8vtgX1JTR9exUFM">https://ciscocx.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_8vtgX1JTR9exUFM</a><br> <br> Thanks,<br> Snort Team<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2024/q4/32">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2024-11-21</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Nov 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 file-image,<br> malware-cnc 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/2024/q4/31">calender where do i get a 2025 snort Wall Calender? Please help</a></strong> <em>Jenny Kie via Snort-sigs (Nov 20)</em><br> i would know how tp receive a snort Wall Calender my email where i can<br> be reached is JENKIE222 () aol com thank you,<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2024/q4/30">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2024-11-19</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Nov 19)</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-pdf,<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/2024/q4/29">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2024-11-14</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Nov 14)</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-firefox,<br> protocol-scada 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/2024/q4/28">Rules</a></strong> <em>Vicente Millan via Snort-sigs (Nov 13)</em><br> Good afternoon, I need some support. I use Snort for Pfsense on AWS Cloud and in addition to the rules we have, I need <br> to add or create others that monitor, inspect and alert/prevent covert malware communication channels. This is in order <br> to comply with PCI-DSS Version 4.01. If you can guide me in some way with some documentation on which rules I should <br> apply,<br> <br> Thank you all.<br> <br> Vicente Millán<br> <br> Gerencia de Infraestructura<br> Consultor Senior...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2024/q4/27">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2024-11-12</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Nov 12)</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-2024-43451:<br> A coding deficiency exists in Microsoft Windows SmartScreen that may<br> lead to spoofing.<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 62022 through 62023,<br> Snort 3: GID 1, SID 300612....<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2024/q4/26">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2024-11-07</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Nov 07)</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-plugins and<br> server-webapp rule sets to provide coverage for emerging threats from<br> 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/2024/q4/25">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2024-11-04</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Nov 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 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/2024/q4/24">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2024-10-31</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Oct 31)</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-other 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/2024/q4/23">possible false positive for &apos;INDICATOR-SHELLCODE x86 setgid 0&apos; can someone confirm</a></strong> <em>John via Snort-sigs (Oct 29)</em><br> When I attempt to download the following xz file, my IPS blocks it with the below populating the snort log. I suspect <br> this is a false positive unless there is some code in the xz file that is truly malicious. Can someone with more <br> knowledge about the rule please comment?<br> <br> Link to file that triggers the match:<br> <a rel="nofollow" href="http://fl.us.mirror.archlinuxarm.org/armv7h/extra/qt5-base-5.15.15%2Bkde%2Br136-1-armv7h.pkg.tar.xz">http://fl.us.mirror.archlinuxarm.org/armv7h/extra/qt5-base-5.15.15%2Bkde%2Br136-1-armv7h.pkg.tar.xz</a><br> <br> Entry from snort log:...<br> </p> <p class="excerpt"> <strong><a href="https://seclists.org/snort/2024/q4/22">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2024-10-29</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Oct 29)</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-firefox,<br> malware-cnc, malware-other, os-linux 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/2024/q4/21">Snort Subscriber Rules Update 2024-10-24</a></strong> <em>Research via Snort-sigs (Oct 24)</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-multimedia,<br> malware-cnc, protocol-snmp 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> <!-- 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. 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