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[Full-disclosure] RE: Publishing exploit code - what is it good for
- To: full-disclosure@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, bugtraq@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: [Full-disclosure] RE: Publishing exploit code - what is it good for
- From: Socrates <socrates@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 30 Jun 2005 22:40:42 -0500
I for one am glad to see PoC code. Too often vendors are very vague with
their patchsets (Oracle basically says to install a huge tarball to fix
'critical' vulnerabilities without listing exactly what it fixes and the
recent Backup Exec vulnerability had a later patch version available for
a different unrelated problem than the published advisory for the agent
password overflow - you had to read three different advisories to find
out if the later patchset had the fix - it did, even then it was a crap
shoot). Given the lack of disclosure from the vendors, I like to have
PoC code available to test if the patch really was applied correctly
(and was the correct one). Don't forget the instances when either a
patch silently fails, or if you are a security admin, don't trust that
the admins really patched all of their machines. I would forgo most PoC
codes if vendors would *exactly* explain what was in their patchsets
(and provided a way to test for the existence of easily) and what they
addressed without these matrix's of different versions of their product
cross-referenced to a simple 'critical' reference. Even as vague as MS
announcements are, they are still one of the better disclosing vendors
when it comes to their announcements.
Then again, I like to learn from the PoC code to further my knowledge as
how the inner workings of programs work and how much of a poor job
someone did while coding it.
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