Slashdot Mirror


DNS Flaw Hits More Than Just the Web

gringer writes "Dan Kaminsky presented at the Black Hat conference in Las Vegas on Wednesday, and said that the DNS vulnerability he discovered is much more dangerous than most have appreciated. Besides hijacking web browsers, hackers might attack email services and spam filters, FTP, Rsync, BitTorrent, Telnet, SSH, as well as SSL services. Ultimately it's not a question of which systems can be attacked by exploiting the flaw, but rather which ones cannot. Then again, it could just be hype. For more information, see Kaminsky's power point presentation." Update: 08/07 19:48 GMT by T : There's also an animation of the progress of the patch.

9 of 215 comments (clear)

  1. Shocked!!! by YouOverThere · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You mean all the services that use DNS are at risk?!?!?!
    Say it isn't so...!
    Here all this time I thought the Internet WAS the Web...

  2. Litmus testing by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you are reading this on Slashdot, and you are just now realizing that DNS exploits affect more than just the web, then get the hell out of here. Shoo. Leave your card at the door.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    1. Re:Litmus testing by DavidTC · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No shit.

      News for Really Dumb Nerds: Rest of internet uses same DNS system as web pages, not some magical other system to look up domain names.

      This flaw, if it exist, is more dangerous for email and FTP. Because those automatically log in, and thus attackers can just wildcard all domains to a password collection server.

      Unlike web sites, where you have to mimic each individual website, or built a complicated pass-through, to get people to log in. (Or attempt to steal cookies, which has its own problems.)

      I realized that about two minutes after I read about the flaw.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    2. Re:Litmus testing by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sorry Kirk, we can't win this battle. Back in the day only professionals, nerds and skilled technicians visited Slashdot. These days the site (for monetary reasons, I'm sure) has to cater to a much larger audience and we have to accept that we, the low-digit-UID crowd, are no longer representative for Slashdot.

      The only problem is, our chances are not much better anywhere else. I miss the days when the Internet consisted mostly of early adopters. (Then again, we need the masses because they make it feasible to have actually useful things like Internet banking and on-line pizza orders.)

    3. Re:Litmus testing by caferace · · Score: 5, Insightful
      "If you are reading this on Slashdot..."

      Good point. How do we know this really is Slashdot?

  3. News for the masses by Rob+Kaper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This might surprise people relatively new to technology, but it should be obvious to anyone who's been in the field for a while.

    If you can hijack DNS, you can of course replace any networked service with your own (as man-in-the-middle attack or otherwise). If you change the road signs on an intersection in the countryside, not just cars are vulnerable - all traffic is.

    This would have been an interesting and informative story in the early days of Slashdot when we were all still new to the concepts of Internet. Anno 2008, I would have expected more from the editors (maybe not the new recruit, but timothy has been around for a long time). News for nerds has become news for the masses, it seems.

    Maybe I should stop reading the main page and start checking only Science, Mobile and YRO.

  4. Re:SSH and SSL protected by David+Jao · · Score: 4, Insightful

    someone could hijack your bank website, use a self-signed certificate and Firefox would just ignore the authentication error.

    What's to stop somebody from hijacking the bank website, redirecting to a website that uses no SSL at all, and waiting for the passwords to roll in?

    Firefox and IE will, by default, warn you about sending unencrypted passwords. Once. And no more than once.

    Of course, many or perhaps even most people will notice that the site is unencrypted, but the attacker doesn't need to fool everybody. Even a 20% success rate is plenty good enough.

  5. Re:SSH and SSL protected by nonpareility · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's to stop somebody from hijacking the bank website, redirecting to a website that uses no SSL at all, and waiting for the passwords to roll in?

    If you normally access your bank's website by way of https, you wouldn't get redirected because the hijacked website's certificate wouldn't be valid. Other than that, you're just describing phishing.

  6. Verisign say it's hype - pardon me while I barf by MadMidnightBomber · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ken Silva, chief technology officer at Verisign, said: "We have anticipated these flaws in DNS for many years and we have basically engineered around them."

    He believed there had been "some hype" around how the DNS flaw will affect consumers. He added that while it was an interesting way to exploit DNS on weak servers, there were other ways to misdirect people that remained.

    Here we should point out that Verisign are the pig-fuckers who stopped returning NXDOMAIN for .com in favour of their own search page and should never be trusted to say anything sensible about DNS.

    "It's been overplayed in a sense. I think it has served to confuse the consumer into believing there is somehow now a way to misdirect them to a wrong site.

    Well, Mr Silva, it IS a way to misdirect them to a wrong site.

    --
    "It doesn't cost enough, and it makes too much sense."