Full Disclosure mailing list archives
Re: Reflection Scan: an Off-Path Attack on TCP
From: xD 0x41 <secn3t () gmail com>
Date: Thu, 19 Jan 2012 17:42:16 +1100
there is a video,and proper PoC's,and yes, theyre not yet public and this is NOT 100% right either... maybe, wait abit, i have shown one person only the actual proof of this and, how it works well, the vid of it.. but, it stays pvt that was to one FD lister who, can actually keep shit to themselves...and will repect the fact, that he has it, and, the writer, knows this also, and, i assume since this has been annoying 30000ppl, coz, 90% of this list are fkn lamers, seriously, or, why would they continually fuck this up, and, it only took a LINUX expert, to debug it on both win and linux :s on win7 actually...so really, i hope when he posts it, itll shut half of these ppl up and, really, i have madesure one decent person knows that i dont lie, and, i can promise you now, this bug is here and works, and has codes for, BUT, the video is ONLY part available and b. fd doesnt deserve it thru me, since the maker of the actual pocs is ON this list, i will assume he can see when it is the right time...to post it but, believe me, it is real.. it just depends on how it is done. now, go away. guy does not explain it right...and, when the person releases the video to the list, im sure, he will soon... On 19 January 2012 17:18, Robert Kim App and Facebook Marketing <evdo.hsdpa () gmail com> wrote:
Is there a diagram or a video? I'm not a professional IT guy so I'm gunna need something of a tutorial! HAHA! On Thu, Jan 19, 2012 at 11:22 AM, xD 0x41 <secn3t () gmail com> wrote:On 18 January 2012 09:45, Jan Wrobel <wrr () mixedbit org> wrote:Hi, This TCP session hijacking technique might be of interest to some of you. Abstract: The paper demonstrates how traffic load of a shared packet queue can be exploited as a side channel through which protected information leaks to an off-path attacker. The attacker sends to a victim a sequence of identical spoofed segments. The victim responds to each segment in the sequence (the sequence is reflected by the victim) if the segments satisfy a certain condition tested by the attacker. The responses do not reach the attacker directly, but induce extra load on a routing queue shared between the victim and the attacker. Increased processing time of packets traversing the queue reveal that the tested condition was true. The paper concentrates on the TCP, but the-- Robert Q Kim High Volume and Digital Printing Company in Seoul http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CaWEWl8saHw San Diego, CA 92007 310 598 1606 _______________________________________________ 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/
Current thread:
- Reflection Scan: an Off-Path Attack on TCP Jan Wrobel (Jan 18)
- Re: Reflection Scan: an Off-Path Attack on TCP xD 0x41 (Jan 18)
- Re: Reflection Scan: an Off-Path Attack on TCP Robert Kim App and Facebook Marketing (Jan 18)
- Re: Reflection Scan: an Off-Path Attack on TCP xD 0x41 (Jan 18)
- Re: Reflection Scan: an Off-Path Attack on TCP Jason Hellenthal (Jan 19)
- Re: Reflection Scan: an Off-Path Attack on TCP Robert Kim App and Facebook Marketing (Jan 18)
- Re: Reflection Scan: an Off-Path Attack on TCP Marsh Ray (Jan 19)
- Re: Reflection Scan: an Off-Path Attack on TCP xD 0x41 (Jan 18)