Full Disclosure mailing list archives

Re: University of Central Florida Multiple LFI


From: Caspian Kilkelly <caspian () random-interrupt org>
Date: Sun, 20 Feb 2011 12:18:23 -0500

Chris and Luis,
Thinking that a university IT department is a centralized, monolithic structure (like it is in most businesses) is 
stretching it. Most of the places I've worked with or for have little internal empires run by whoever got there first, 
and their budgets are pretty slim. Having something like a regular infrastructure meeting would be great if the heads 
of the official infrastructure department even knew who the other infrastructure stakeholders were, but they usually 
don't. 

Additionally, 5 days or even 12 is far too short a time to disclose vulns for institutions that have a support response 
time of a week or more (most universities move at a glacial pace). While I realize that you think this is critical, 
their IT managers might not have any idea what the problem is (communications are poor, they are usually undertrained 
and underpaid), and certainly have about 300 other things to think about that are likely just as serious to them (like 
prof Fuzzyhair's massive lab installation, or the director of research needing a new pc). Next time, make a few phone 
calls, and not to the peons who run the support desk (no offense, help desk), call the head of IT or the president, 
rector, or someone equally high up, and give them enough time to respond. You catch more flies with honey, etc..


Caspian


On 2011-02-19, at 1:02 PM, Chris M <chris () nullroute net> wrote:

Agreed - by not taking further steps following the complete negligence of the institution to protect the security of 
their assets (and thereby placing students & staff at risk) there must be some further incentive to bring this to 
their attention. If anything they should have regular infrastructure meetings where items like this should be at the 
top of the agenda.

Its unfortunate that it has to come to this with many institutions - I have had many similar experiences.

On Sat, Feb 19, 2011 at 5:54 PM, Hack Talk <hacktalkblog () gmail com> wrote:
Weev,

I actually know many of the "techrangers" who are UCF employed students which are in charge of maintaining websites 
and have spoken to them personally about these and other vulnerabilities many times in the past and they have yet to 
patch them. In addition to that I have gone so far as to finding one of the developer's website 
(http://www.stevenmonetti.com/) and not only emailing him, but adding him to my gTalk list (the invitation to which 
he has yet to accept after about a month) and after looking at his resume left him a text message and a voicemail all 
with no contact back. I am flat out when reporting vulnerabilities and let the affected party know from day one that 
I follow the RFP Responsible Disclosure Policy and if I don't hear back in 5 days I no longer need to work with them. 
On days 3 and 5 I always email back if they haven't gotten back in contact with me and once again reiterate the 
disclosure policy. At this point they must not care enough if I was doing that every 3 days for quite some time. If 
they don't care about their own security then something must happen to make them care.


Luis Santana



On Sat, Feb 19, 2011 at 12:49 PM, Eyeballing Weev <eyeballing.weev () gmail com> wrote:
Shawn,

"Hack Talk" would rather fire off 5 emails than pick up a phone, make a
phone call and call someone from the WHOIS information since by his own
admission he's a Florida resident who lives near UCF or maybe he's
worried about law enforcement after all ;-)


On 02/19/2011 12:46 PM, Hack Talk wrote:
Hey Shawn,

I typically follow the Rain Forest Puppy Responsible Disclosure Policy
which I'm sure many people have read. I even extended the contact time
to 2 weeks since Universities are quite busy places. During those 2
weeks I personally emailed them back 5 times and did not get a single
response back. This is not the first time the University has neglected
to respond to vulnerabilities affecting their sites and as such I
decided that enough was enough and that by publicly disclosing these
vulnerabilities they would be forced to patch their code. I've worked
with many Universities in the past to patch there vulnerabilities and
they have responded typically within 12 hours of me sending my initial
email alerting them to the issue. Being a .edu does not exempt you from
hackers wanting into your system and it does not mean you can get away
with having gaping holes in security for months without patching them.

Full Disclosure as a methodology is about forcing people to fix their
holes which is exactly what I was hoping would happen to UCF.

Thanks for doing your best to extinguish the flamewar that was starting :D.


Luis Santana




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_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/



-- 
 I’m a hot-wired, heat seeking, warm-hearted cool customer, voice activated and bio-degradable. I interface with my 
database, my database is in cyberspace, so I’m interactive, I’m hyperactive and from time to time I’m radioactive. 
_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
_______________________________________________
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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