Full Disclosure mailing list archives

RE: No Subject (re: openssh exploit code?)


From: "Schmehl, Paul L" <pauls () utdallas edu>
Date: Tue, 21 Oct 2003 10:08:39 -0500

-----Original Message-----
From: mitch_hurrison () ziplip com [mailto:mitch_hurrison () ziplip com] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 21, 2003 2:23 AM
To: Schmehl, Paul L
Cc: full-disclosure () lists netsys com
Subject: Re: [Full-disclosure] No Subject (re: openssh exploit code?)

Again, what is it about your personality that makes you 
incapable of taking part in an adult discussion of 
responsible disclosure issues? Is it that anyone who has a 
different opinion than yours is automatically not worth your 
time? That sounds kind of nazi-like to me mr. Schmehl. 

Oops!  Godwin alert!

Mitch, I've taken part in quite a few adult discussions.  In this one I
deliberately choose to mirror your behavior on the list.  I know you
won't see that or agree with it, but others will.  You come across as an
arrogant, condescending jerk who thinks they're superior to 99.99% of
the people on this list.  How do you think people should react to that?
By cheering you?

If you're such a great coder that you can figure out exploits when no
one else can, yet you're unwilling to share even the *theory* behind
them to this list, then why do you bother posting about it?  Logically,
the only reason can be to inflate your own image and ego.  It's like the
little kid who taunts the others at school because he knows something
that they don't.

It's quite saddening to see this list turn into a pack of 
hungry saliving fools at even a hint of an exploit for this 
issue. You seem to have more of a hardon for the "juarez" 
than any "kiddie" I've ever met. Even when trying to debate 
some of the issues surrounding the disclosure of such a 
potentially devastating exploit all one gets is "yeah, yeah. 
Now make with the warez".

I can't speak for others, but I really could care less about the
exploit.  That's not where my interests lie.  Coding bores me, and I
only do it when I have to, to solve a problem.  "Slaving away" over
code, as security snot whined about, is not my idea of time well spent.
I also don't have any aspirations at mastering quantum physics, but I
*do* expect the physicists to treat me with the same respect with which
I treat them.

If you don't like being treated like a jerk, then don't act like one.
   
As far as it being "easy" to exploit. No it isn't. You have 
to abuse a lesser issue, a memory leak to be more precise, to 
get a heap layout that will allow you to survive the initial 
memset without landing in bad memory. Now without going into 
details anyone who manages to survive the initial memset 
should be able to debug the crash to the point of 
exploitation. This is managable on atleast Linux IA32 systems. 

Now this is useful information, which you *could* have shared a long
time ago, sans attitude.

Now I'll try and bring my original point forward one last 
time, allthough I fear it will just call for more immature 
commentary from the likes of Paul Schmehl.

There is no need for anyone to release this exploit. It will 
change nothing about the fact that you need to upgrade your 
daemons. It will change nothing about the bugdetails already 
published. There is no reasoning for it other than "but I 
want to learn how to do it".

This is where you go off the track.  You clearly don't understand how
networks and infrastructures work.  As others have already pointed out
to you, *some* systems can't be taken offline "just" to patch a
*possible* exploit.  Yeah, I know that there's a group of folks that
freak out when they hear that.  But in the real world, decisions about
taking critical systems down are based on a *number* of factors, not
*just* on whether or not a patch has been released.  So, when people cry
"It's exploitable" but no clear explanation of why is forthcoming,
admins tend to discount the claims, chalking them up to more FUD.  After
all, there are guys (like security snot did) who will claim they "0wn"
you all day long.  Where's the proof?  Talk is cheap.

You don't have to release any code to explain the problem.  You can
write a paper, like Aleph did in "Smashing the Stack....", which
explains the *theory* behind the problem without providing any usuable
code for "kiddies".  Or you can provide some details of the theory, as
you have above, that will point others in the right direction.

And sorry but that's just not 
good enough to warrant the mayhem that will ensue when an 
exploit like this is released. So if you in your academic 
pursuits decide to tackle this problem. By all means go right 
ahead. But I think anyone who's discovered the real impact of 
this bug will realise that disclosing the exploit to the 
general public is highly irresponsible. 

This, of course, flies in the face of the entire purpose of this list,
but I'll leave that argument to others.

So instead of trying to poke fun at me Paul, why don't you do 
your duty as a knight of Full Disclosure and provide the good 
people of this list with a definite analysis on the ossh 32k 
nul heap munging? (buzzword quota filled).

Oh, I'm not poking fun at you at all, Mitch.  I'm mirroring your
attitude and behavior on the list.  I hope you will see that, but who
knows.

There is simply no need for exploits, especially not one that 
would affect people and nations around the globe. You have to 
look beyond your own little egocentric world of friendly 
exploit dev and "but it's fun", and take a look at the bigger 
picture. 

Again, you miss the point entirely.  The folks that have asked you for
more information are not looking for "fun".  They are trying to make
real life decisions about taking down critical systems for **unscheduled
downtime** to patch them.  You fail to understand that many admins can't
simply take a system down because Mitch says they should.  They need
solid arguments to take to their bosses to explain why this particular
system needs to be downed *today* rather than waiting for a regularly
scheduled maintenance window.  When a worm comes out, it's a no brainer.
(But even then sometimes the bosses don't believe you until they've been
burned at least once.) But admins can't take systems down every time
someone cries "Patch now!  This is exploitable!"

I personally would prefer that every system gets patched the day the
patch is released.  The reality is that it just doesn't happen that way.
When a professor is in the middle of a major experiment and you tell him
you have to take his system down *now*, what do you think his reaction
is going to be?  If he's running a four day simulation, and you asking
him on day three, you aren't going to get a positive reaction.  There's
a lot more to taking systems offline to patch them than the word of
someone on this list.

Try to think outside your own small box.

Paul Schmehl (pauls () utdallas edu)
Adjunct Information Security Officer
The University of Texas at Dallas
AVIEN Founding Member
http://www.utdallas.edu/~pauls/ 

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