|
BugTraq
DJB's students release 44 *nix software vulnerability advisories Dec 16 2004 09:47AM Thor Larholm (thor pivx com) (3 replies) Re: DJB's students release 44 *nix software vulnerability advisories Dec 17 2004 07:40AM security curmudgeon (jericho attrition org) (1 replies) Re: DJB's students release 44 *nix software vulnerability advisories Dec 17 2004 11:35PM Julian T J Midgley (jtjm xenoclast org) Re: DJB's students release 44 *nix software vulnerability advisories Dec 16 2004 11:01PM Crispin Cowan (crispin immunix com) |
|
Privacy Statement |
>This small group of students highlights how individuals outside the
>security industry without special security prerequisites can still
>manage to outperform the average Bugtraq poster in sheer quantity of
>discoveries. This adequately validates the typical estimate of between 5
>and 15 errors in every thousand lines of code.
>
>
Most of the 44 posted "security" advisories are about software bugs with
a very low security risk. See for example the posted bug on NASM
(http://tigger.uic.edu/~jlongs2/holes/nasm.txt): what's the chance of an
evil asm file being sent to an ignorant user that calls nasm to compile
this file? And this nasm bug is then called a "remotely exploitable
security hole". If I mail out a shell script that does "rm -rf $HOME/*",
this can also be considered a remotely exploitable security hole.
A proper (wide-scale) remotely exploitable security hole is one than can
be exploited without any ignorant user on the other side: for example,
the bug Windows Messenger service which was enabled by default, making
every user vulnerable, regardless of their stupidity.
>With a class of 25 students discovering 44 vulnerabilities most students
>now expect to fail the course
>(http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/12/15/2113202).
>
>
I think punishing students that have actually found security holes does
not make the world a better place ;)
--
cees-bart.
[ reply ]