nsane.forums Posted May 10, 2011 Share Posted May 10, 2011 Security researchers from the French pen-testing firm VUPEN have successfully hacked Google’s Chrome browser with what is being described as a sophisticated exploit that bypasses all security features including ASLR/DEP and Chrome’s heralded sandbox feature. VUPEN released a video of the exploit in action to demonstrate a drive-by download attack that successfully launches the calculator app without any user action. The exploit shown in this video is one of the most sophisticated codes we have seen and created so far as it bypasses all security features including ASLR/DEP/Sandbox (and without exploiting a Windows kernel vulnerability), it is silent (no crash after executing the payload), it relies on undisclosed (0day) vulnerabilities discovered by VUPEN and it works on all Windows systems (32-bit and x64). VUPEN, which sells vulnerability and exploit information to business and government customers, does not plan to provide technical details of the attack to anyone, including Google. In the video (see below), the company demonstrates the exploit in action with Google Chrome v11.0.696.65 on Microsoft Windows 7 SP1 (x64). The user is tricked into visiting a specially crafted web page hosting the exploit which executes various payloads to ultimately download the Calculator from a remote location and launch it outside the sandbox (at Medium integrity level). While Chrome has one of the most secure sandboxes and has always survived the Pwn2Own contest during the last three years, we have now uncovered a reliable way to execute arbitrary code on any default installation of Chrome despite its sandbox, ASLR and DEP, VUPEN explained. VUPEN made headlines in March this year when a team of its researchers hacked into Apple’s MacBook via a Safari vulnerability to win the CanSecWest PWN2Own contest. View: Original Article Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
oZ. Posted May 11, 2011 Share Posted May 11, 2011 Chrome = Life time Beta, is a matter of stable beta or not Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
toyo Posted May 11, 2011 Share Posted May 11, 2011 Oh well, this has become the norm for all modern software, I remember the good ol' days, I didn't even knew what a "bug" was. Now every piece of software has some issues, and the publishers expect you to spend time troubleshooting their stuff. Since updating through the Internet became so easy and hardware/OS become more complex each year, I guess there is no solution in sight to the everlasting Beta apps we run. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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