BugTraq
Re: On classifying attacks Jul 28 2005 07:26PM
Daniel Weber (djweber alum mit edu) (3 replies)
Re: On classifying attacks Mar 26 2006 02:09AM
Gadi Evron (ge linuxbox org) (1 replies)
Re: On classifying attacks Mar 29 2006 01:19PM
David M Chess (chess us ibm com) (1 replies)
Re: On classifying attacks Mar 30 2006 08:11PM
Gadi Evron (ge linuxbox org) (1 replies)
Re: On classifying attacks Apr 01 2006 11:46AM
john mullee (jmullee yahoo com)
Re: On classifying attacks Aug 02 2005 10:39PM
Shwaine (shwaine shwaine com)
Re: On classifying attacks Jul 24 2005 04:31AM
Duncan Simpson (dps simpson demon co uk)

Nobody has brought this up, so perhaps I should. The problem most
clasiffication schemes discussed are hitting is that security holes are
transitive: remote arbitary code execution+local root exploit=remote root
exploit.

If the exploit code is running on your box then any exploits it peforms are
probably local, even if the attack code is launched by a remote exploit. A
description of a beast as composition of seperate remote and local exploits
would allow a simple remote/local distinction to apply (where "local" means
requiring the code to executed on the attacked box).

Whether trojans count as exploits per se or not is harder--most trojans and
other malware involve authorised users explicitly running a program and that
program doing authorised things. The activity being undesirable activity the
victim did not intend does not change that fact.

As far "malicious data that the victim must explicitly execute" I think such a
word already exists: malware (or trojan, if the appropriate disguise applies).
The success rate of persuading users to run such code is distressingly high.
--
Duncan (-:
"software industry, the: unique industry where selling substandard goods is
legal and you can charge extra for fixing the problems."

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