First Pwn2Own 2009 Contest Winners Emerge
mellowdonkey writes "Last year's CanSecWest hacking contest winner, Charlie Miller, does it again this year in the 2009 Pwn2Own contest. Charlie was the first to compromise Safari this year to win a brand spankin new Macbook. Nils, the other winner, was able to use three separate zero day exploits to whack IE8, Firefox, and Safari as well. Full detail and pictures are available from the sponsor, TippingPoint, who acquired all of the exploits through their Zero Day Initiative program."
Actually, if I'm remembering correctly, Charlie Miller DID say that he knew of more ways to crack into a mac. He also said that Mac was just as insecure as Windows and that Windows gets attacked mainly because of the number of people using it.
Browsers
Chrome: 0
IE8: 1
Firefox: 1(1)*
Safari: 2(1)*
Mobile Browsers
Blackberry: 0
Android: 0
iPhone: 0
Nokia/Symbian: 0
Windows Mobile: 0
*Numbers in parenthesis indicate Successful exploits that fell outside the contest criteria and therefore could not be rewarded.
In Soviet Russia, Trojan exploits YOU!
Nevermind,
Mac easiest to hack, says $10,000 winner
Since no one has placed what 'owned' means, here's the rules from the canwest site:
2009-03-18-01:00:00 PWN2OWN Final Rules
Well after much discussion and deliberation here is the final cut at scenarios for the PWN2OWN competitions.
Browsers and Associated Test PAltform
Vaio - Windows 7
* IE8
* Firefox
* Chrome
Macintosh
* Safari
* Firefox
Day 1: Default install no additional plugins. User goes to link. .net, quicktime. User goes to link. ... User goes to link
Day 2: flash, java,
Day 3: popular apps such as acrobat reader
What is owned? - code execution within context of application
=====
I'm presuming that code execution is the first step towards owning the whole box, which may or may not be trivial once you got code execution happening within the app.