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Solaris Telnet 0-day vulnerability

philos writes "According to SANS ISC, there's a vulnerability in Solaris 10 and 11 telnet that allows anyone to remotely connect as any account, including root, without authentication. Remote access can be gained with nothing more than a telnet client. More information and a Snort signature can be found at riosec.com. Worse, this is almost identical to a bug in AIX and Linux rlogin from way back in 1994."

2 of 342 comments (clear)

  1. Why is this a big deal? by nettdata · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Who the hell even THINKS about enabling telnet on any box these days?

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    $0.02 (CDN)
    1. Re:Why is this a big deal? by mi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If ssh on your cisco boxes is slow, you either have serious network problems [...]

      Most likely, the reverse DNS is misconfigured. This is the number one reason for ssh-login delays. Maybe, the nameservers initially put into the router's configuration are no longer reachable due to subsequent "hardening". Or, maybe, they went away and were replaced long ago — without anybody telling the routers. Nothing else on a router uses DNS usually, so this problem affects only ssh-daemon and gets blamed on it...

      The daemon could, of course, be a little bit smarter and not try to do a reverse DNS, when there are no hostname-based authorization rules in the first place... But that's a minor bug compared to reverse DNS being dysfunctional.

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      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.