A lot to cover in this episode, from high performance fuzzing on GPUs, to low-cost pentesters, and APT groups. And, of course many vulns from GitHub RCEs to VMWare Workstation race conditions.
It has been a while since we had an exploit extravaganza but here we are. Several binary-level issues from Bad Neighbor on Windows to BleedingTooth on Linux, and several vulns in Qualcomm SoCs, even a Discord RCE.
Its a web-exploit heavy episode impacing Apple, Hasicorp, Azure, Google, and even a DOMPurify Bypass. Then we end-off with a look into benchmarking fuzzers, and a look at the House of Muney heap exploitation technique.
Every wondering how you might fingerprint and trace exploit devs in the wild? Wondered what a backdoor in a D-Link router looks like? Want to hack Facebook (for Android)? We have all of that and more!
Lets go back in time to look at the leaked WinXP source, and a Half-Life 1 exploit. And, while we are at it a couple Instagram vulns and a cheap hardware attack against Android.
Leading off this week's discussion is the news about the now remote CCC and Offensive Security's plans to retire OSCE. On the exploit side of things, this week we have a few recent bug bounties including a Google Maps XSS, a FreeBSD TOCTOU, and a couple of Linux kernel vulnerabilities.
A quick chat about E2E Crypto and Zoom, followed by a few noteworth exploits including Bluetooth impersonation, a 15-year old qmail CVE, NordVPN, and an RCE in Google. Ending with some mitigation research looking at making singlely linked lists safe, XSS prevention, and Code-Reuse Gadgets.
Since we forgot to cover it when it came out, we look at Relyze's new decompiler that is available on the free version. There is also some sandbox escaping, some crypto issues (AMD's SME/SEV) and even some IBM 0days.
Zoom vuln worth $500k? Probably not... What is worth $500k? Binary Ninja's new decompiler...okay probably not but it is exciting.We've also got some stupid issues and some interesting LPEs this episode.
Starting off the week with a discussion about the disappointing IDA Home, before moving into a few easy command injections, code-reuse attacks applied to XSS, detecting trojaned hardware and ending with a subtle crypto-bug.
First, we talk about Facebook trying to buy some spyware, and then we feast upon a number of Zoom "vulns." Follow that up wtih some interesting vulnerabilities including a hyper-visor Guest-to-host escape, a complicated Safari permissions bypass, and a Gitlab Parser Differential.