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Re: [Full-disclosure] extension for Firefox to force HTTPS always?
- To: <valdis.kletnieks@xxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: [Full-disclosure] extension for Firefox to force HTTPS always?
- From: <full-disclosure@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 13 Oct 2007 14:03:14 -0400
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*wow* you win an *award* for most *stars* used in an *email* to
demonstrate your *mental* *superiority* and the *dude* was not even
talking about pentesting he was talking about *browsing teh
interweb* at net cafes.
*you* could have asked for *clarifications* on what he was trying
to *accomplish* and instead you chose to *try* becoming a
*trendsetter* by using lots of *** in your *email* and still
managed to be *completely* offtopic *and* continue to be *useless*.
*at least* *gobbles* wants in your pants.
http://lists.grok.org.uk/pipermail/full-disclosure/2007-
October/066616.html
On Sat, 13 Oct 2007 11:14:26 -0400 Valdis.Kletnieks@xxxxxx wrote:
>On Sat, 13 Oct 2007 10:25:46 EDT, full-disclosure@xxxxxxxxxxxx
>said:
>
>> No idea you got an idea big guy?
>
>No, merely pointing out a under-specification of the problem.
>There's any
>number of ways that it *could* be set up - the question is what
>the *desired*
>behavior is. Blindly rewriting everything to https: is *doable*,
>but results
>in some ugly corner cases. Now, Kristian's *original* request was
>"you don't
>want to leak unencrypted data". The reasonable response is - is
>it OK to leak
>unencrypted, *unimportant* data (such as hitting www.cnn.com to
>check the news
>while you take a short break)? In fact, a *clever* pen tester may
>in fact
>*want* to have at least *some* innocuous port 80 traffic, just so
>they don't
>stand out because they're *only* doing port 443 traffic....
>
>(And the *really* sneaky pen tester will maintain a pseudo-random
>stream of
>hits to CNN and google and the like, and tunnel their *important*
>data out via
>SSL to some site with a pr0n-for-pay-ish name like www.llamas-r-
>hot.com,
>because you *expect* to see that sort of traffic distrbution... ;)
>
>So while "do everything over SSL" may sound like a good first cut
>(and in fact
>*is* a good start), the overall question is "what data do you want
>to conceal,
>and from whom, exactly?"
>
>> On Fri, 12 Oct 2007 22:45:12 -0400 Valdis.Kletnieks@xxxxxx
>wrote:
>> >Same problem still - you proxy, you rewrite it to port 443 -
>and
>> >the destination
>> >doesn't *have* anything at port 443. What should your Apache
>do?
>
>And anybody who has been doing security for more than a week or so
>*knows* that
>failure to deal with corner cases like "but there's nothing
>*listening* on
>port 443" is a *major* source of bugs and places to find your 0-
>days.
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