This is a summary of the responses to this message. Please, check reporting
whether an exploit works for you remember to include the OS and application
version numbers, what patches you have applied, and under what conditions
you tested.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Windows 98 - BSOD, TCP stack not working
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Source: RedHat 6.1
Target: NT4 SP6a
Packets went through a Cisco ethernet switch.
Did not do anything.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Did not work.
"Torgeir Hansen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Locks up Win98se box (PII-350, 128Mb ram) on a lan.
It does NOT affect NT4.0 Server with sp5 on lan.
Windows 200 does not die (tested via modem and lan).
Gene Black <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Hmmm. This didn't do a thing to my Windows 95 (B) box (local or remote
testing), but it trashed my Cisco 760 series ISDN router. I was running
the code below off of a remote box (so the trash was coming in the WAN
side) and the router was hit so hard that the ethernet side wasn't even
pingable. Everything trying to route through it started producing
various strange routing errors (like host unreachable when trying to
traceroute beyond it). Occasionally a few packets would make it through,
but this was fairly rare. I'm assuming that what happened here is the
CPU on the router was overloaded. I wouldn't have expected this though,
because the setup for the router is fairly simple. No filters, no
routing protocols (all static), no nothing...
Clifford Hammerschmidt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Windows 2000: Net access of any kind causes GPF's.
Windows 98: Blue screen as soon as you try running anything.
Frank v Waveren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Does nothing to a p166 with 16mb ram running win95 over a 10mbit.
--
Elias Levy
SecurityFocus.com
http://www.securityfocus.com/