A company that sells exploits to government agencies drops Tor Browser zero-day on Twitter after recent Tor Browser update renders exploit less valuable.
Zerodium, a company that buys and sells vulnerabilities in popular software, has published details today on Twitter about a zero-day vulnerability in the Tor Browser, a Firefox-based browser used by privacy-conscious users for navigating the web through the anonymity provided by the Tor network.
In a tweet, Zerodium said the vulnerability is a full bypass of the "Safest" security level of the NoScript extension that's included by default with all Tor Browser distributions.
NoScript is a browser extension that uses a whitelist approach to let the user decide from what domains the browser can execute JavaScript, Flash, Java, or Silverlight content. It is included with all Tor Browser distributions because it provides an extra layer of security for Tor Browser users.
Zerodium's Tor zero-day basically allows malicious code to run inside the Tor Browser by bypassing NoScript's script-blocking ability.
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 12 2018, @11:25AM
Making it illegal won't make me stop holding them. In fact, i cant think of any illegal thing, that i won't do because its illegal. Usually its not the "illegal", that stops me, its the "unprofitable".
"Meanwhile, the world suffers." - modernity discource detected, as if suffering was less before exploit brokers came into existence.
The "more secure world" is a logical extreme, has nothing to do with reality.
THERE EXISTS NO SECURITY, AND NEVER WILL EXIST
the only thing that's real is WAR