CVE-2016-3130

An information disclosure vulnerability in the Core and Management Console in BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES) 12 through 12.5.2 allows remote attackers to obtain local or domain credentials of an administrator or user account by sniffing traffic between the two elements during a login attempt.

CVE-2016-10141

An integer overflow vulnerability was observed in the regemit function in regexp.c in Artifex Software, Inc. MuJS before fa3d30fd18c348bb4b1f3858fb860f4fcd4b2045. The attack requires a regular expression with nested repetition. A successful exploitation of this issue can lead to code execution or a denial of service (buffer overflow) condition.

CVE-2016-10136

An issue was discovered on BLU R1 HD devices with Shanghai Adups software. The content provider named com.adups.fota.sysoper.provider.InfoProvider in the app with a package name of com.adups.fota.sysoper allows any app on the device to read, write, and delete files as the system user. In the com.adups.fota.sysoper app’s AndroidManifest.xml file, it sets the android:sharedUserId attribute to a value of android.uid.system which makes it execute as the system user, which is a very privileged user on the device. This allows a third-party app to read, write, and delete files owned by the system user. The third-party app can modify the /data/system/users/0/settings_secure.xml file to add an app as a notification listener to be able to receive the text of notifications as they are received on the device. This also allows the /data/system/users/0/accounts.db to be read which contains authentication tokens for various accounts on the device. The third-party app can obtain privileged information and also modify files to obtain more privileges on the device.

CVE-2016-9882

An issue was discovered in Cloud Foundry Foundation cf-release versions prior to v250 and CAPI-release versions prior to v1.12.0. Cloud Foundry logs the credentials returned from service brokers in Cloud Controller system component logs. These logs are written to disk and often sent to a log aggregator via syslog.

Nginx (Debian-based + Gentoo distros) – Root Privilege Escalation [CVE-2016-1247 UPDATE]

Posted by Dawid Golunski on Jan 13

[Updated CVE-2016-1247 advisory]

Nginx packages on Gentoo distros were also found vulnerable to Root
Privilege Escalation (CVE-2016-1247) exploit I discovered last year.

Updated advisory URL:
https://legalhackers.com/advisories/Nginx-Exploit-Deb-Root-PrivEsc-CVE-2016-1247.html

Gentoo notice:
https://security.gentoo.org/glsa/201701-22

Follow:
https://twitter.com/dawid_golunski
for more vulns.

Regards,
Dawid Golunski
https://legalhackers.com

Donald Trump appoints a CyberSecurity Advisor Whose Own Site is Damn Vulnerable

Former New York City Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani has been appointed as a cyber security advisor for the President-elect Donald Trump, but it appears that he never actually checked the security defenses of his own company’s website.

Giuliani is going to head a new Cybersecurity Working group for the President-elect, and “will be sharing his expertise and insight as a trusted friend concerning

Now Hackers Can Spy On Us Using Our Headphones

Hackers can access your data through your headphones

Mark Zuckerberg has a revealing routine he carries out on a regular basis which says as much about him as it does our current era of cyber-uncertainty. Every day when he’s finished talking to friends and business associates, he covers up his laptop’s webcam and microphone jack with a small piece of tape.

Is this simply the paranoia of a man who over the last two decades has had to deal with increasingly sensitive information as well as diminishing privacy in his personal life?

All we know is that many people are utilizing the simple hardware hack, in much the same way, as a cyber security precaution. Whilst those who promote the use of tape no doubt favor the method for its brilliant simplicity, we have worrying news for anyone that thinks this method has all bases covered.

Now even your headphones can spy on you

Your headphones, it has now emerged, can be repurposed from afar, turning them into a microphone capable of recording audio, all of this unbeknownst to the device’s user. A group of Israeli researchers has recently created a piece of malware in order to show how determined hackers could hijack your device and reconfigure it into sending them audio links.

The headphone technology

The researchers, based at Ben Gurion University, created a code aimed at testing their fears about headphone technology. The proof-of-concept code, titled “Speake(a)r,” proved that the very commonly used RealTek audio codec chips contain a vulnerability that allows them to be used to silently repurpose a computers output channel as an input channel.

As Wired magazine have noted, turning a pair of headphones into microphones is a fairly simple task. A quick search on Youtube reveals an abundance of simple hack videos demonstrating how to switch your music listening device into an audio recorder. So it’s the RealTek vulnerability that is the real worry. As the Israeli research team have found, the issue would allow a hacker to record audio if you’re using a mic-less pair of headphones, and even if your laptop or device’s microphone setting is disabled.

Privacy vulnerability

Mordechai Guri, part of Ben Gurion’s cyber security research team, spoke to Wired about the vulnerability they had discovered. “People don’t think about this privacy vulnerability. Even if you remove your computer’s microphone, if you use headphones you can be recorded.” He added that, “almost every computer today [is] vulnerable to this type of attack.”

The researchers tested their malware hack using Sennheiser headphones. “It’s very effective,” Guri said. “Your headphones do make a good quality microphone.” The team also detailed the extent of the malware’s capability, saying that a hacked pair of headphones could record audio as far as 20 feet away. The recorded file can even be compressed so it can easily be sent over the Internet.

As Guri says, the problem is not one that can receive a simple patch and the vulnerable audio chip may need to be redesigned and replaced in future computers. The full extent of the problem is also not known, as the Ben Gurion research team has so far focused only on RealTek audio chips. They are set to expand their research to determine which other codec chips and smart phones may be vulnerable.

So, if like an increasing amount of people in this era of cyber security, you feel vulnerable to eavesdropping, don’t only reach for the tape. Make sure those headphones are unplugged so as not to be the victim of a stealthy new form of malware.

The post Now Hackers Can Spy On Us Using Our Headphones appeared first on Panda Security Mediacenter.

[CVE-2016-3403] [Zimbra] Multiple CSRF in Administration interface – all versions

Posted by Sysdream Labs on Jan 12

# CVE-2016-3403: Multiple CSRF in Zimbra Administration interface

## Description

Multiple CSRF vulnerabilities have been found in the administration
interface of Zimbra, giving possibilities like adding, modifying and
removing admin accounts.

## Vulnerability

Every forms in the Administration part of Zimbra are vulnerable to CSRF
because of the lack of a CSRF token identifying a valid session. As a
consequence, requests can be forged and…

Multiple vulnerabilities in cPanel <= 60.0.34

Posted by Open Security on Jan 12

===[ Introduction ]===

cPanel offers web hosting software that automates the intricate workings
of web hosting servers.
cPanel equips server administrators with the necessary tools to provide
top-notch hosting to customers on tens of thousands of servers worldwide.

===[ Description ]===

I) Cross Domain Scripting :
A local user can run JavaScript code in other user’s domain and access
cookies and compromise the victim website.
POC : User…

ICMPv6 PTBs and IPv6 frag filtering (particularly at BGP peers)

Posted by Fernando Gont on Jan 12

Folks,

I’m curious about whether folks are filtering ICMPv6 PTB<1280
and/or IPv6 fragments targeted to BGP routers (off-list datapoints are
welcome).

In any case, you mind find it worth reading to check if you’re affected
(from Section 2 of recently-published RFC8021):

—- cut here —-
The security implications of IP fragmentation have been discussed at
length in [RFC6274] and [RFC7739]. An attacker can leverage the…