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BugTraq
Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 16 2004 11:26AM R Armiento (rar_bt armiento se) (7 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 17 2004 05:27PM Joel Eriksson (je-secfocus bitnux com) (3 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 18 2004 08:57PM Jason Coombs (jasonc science org) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 18 2004 06:52PM PSE-L mail professional org (Sean Straw / PSE) RE: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 17 2004 02:18PM Aaron Cake (aaron vltpm com) (1 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 21 2004 01:23PM Chris Brown (chris wavetex com) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 17 2004 11:28AM David F. Skoll (dfs roaringpenguin com) (4 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? (silently dropping messages) Jun 22 2004 02:20PM Martin Maèok (martin macok underground cz) (2 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? (silently dropping messages) Jun 24 2004 07:15AM Valdis Kletnieks vt edu Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? (silently dropping messages) Jun 23 2004 12:53AM David F. Skoll (dfs roaringpenguin com) (2 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? (silently dropping messages) Jun 23 2004 10:46PM der Mouse (mouse Rodents Montreal QC CA) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? (silently dropping messages) Jun 23 2004 09:48PM PSE-L mail professional org (Sean Straw / PSE) (2 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? (silently dropping messages) Jun 25 2004 07:49PM der Mouse (mouse Rodents Montreal QC CA) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? (silently dropping messages) Jun 25 2004 05:35PM Seth Breidbart (sethb panix com) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 20 2004 01:52PM Luca Berra (bluca comedia it) (3 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 24 2004 08:32PM Michael A. Dickerson (mikey singingtree com) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 23 2004 05:07PM PSE-L mail professional org (Sean Straw / PSE) (2 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 24 2004 07:42PM The Fungi (fungi yuggoth org) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 24 2004 05:44PM John Fitzgibbon (bugtraq jfitz com) (1 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 25 2004 05:08AM PSE-L mail professional org (Sean Straw / PSE) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 19 2004 02:56PM Kyle Wheeler (kyle-bugtraq memoryhole net) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 19 2004 12:49AM Jon Fiedler (jmf9 cwru edu) (1 replies) Re: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 19 2004 01:29AM David F. Skoll (dfs roaringpenguin com) RE: Is predictable spam filtering a vulnerability? Jun 17 2004 08:26AM Hamlesh Motah (admin hamlesh com) |
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R Armiento wrote:
| During a recent email conversation with several participants, we
discovered that the email service of one participant silently
dropped legitimate emails that happened to contain certain
combinations of words common in spam. I believe this sort of filter
is common practice, and in fact even in place for some of my own
email addresses.
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| However, this experience made me think: isn't predictable spam
filtering in general a vulnerability that could be used as a hoax
device? Since most users reply to an email citing the complete
source email, including filter-offending words, it should be
possible to keep a reply, forward, or even a whole thread, under the
radar of specific recipients. If used in combination with forged
replies from addresses predictably dropping emails, I think this may
be a dangerous tool for social engineering.
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| For example: attacker 'A' sends 'B' a social engineering request
for "the secret plans" and says "if you are unsure, forward my
request to your boss and ask if this is okay". 'B' forwards the
email to his boss 'C' and asks "Is this okay?". However, 'C':s spam
filter silently drops the email. 'A' forges a reply from 'C' saying:
"Sure, no problem, go ahead."
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| Regards,
| R. Armiento
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Interesting idea.
That might be problematic if the originator doesn't intercept the
letter to boss as it may contain some important data for
faking the boss's answer
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