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posted by Fnord666 on Friday July 31 2020, @08:26PM   Printer-friendly
from the bad-vendor-no-cookie dept.

If you own one of these 45 Netgear devices, replace it: Kit maker won't patch vulnerable gear despite live proof-of-concept code:

Netgear has quietly decided not to patch more than 40 home routers to plug a remote code execution vulnerability – despite security researchers having published proof-of-concept exploit code.

The vuln was revealed publicly in June by Trend Micro's Zero Day Initiative (ZDI) following six months spent chivvying Netgear behind the scenes to take it seriously.

Keen-eyed Reg readers, however, noticed that Netgear quietly declared 45 of the affected products as "outside the security support period" – meaning those items won't be updated to protect them against the vuln.

America's Carnegie-Mellon University summarised the vuln in a note from its Software Engineering Institute: "Multiple Netgear devices contain a stack buffer overflow in the httpd web server's handling of upgrade_check.cgi, which may allow for unauthenticated remote code execution with root privileges."

[...] With today's revelation that 45 largely consumer and SME-grade items will never be patched, Netgear faces questions over its commitment to older product lines. Such questions have begun to be addressed in Britain by calls from government agencies for new laws forcing manufacturers to reveal devices' design lifespans at the point of purchase.

Brian Gorenc, Trend Micro's senior director of vulnerability research and head of ZDI, told The Register in a statement: "Consumers should always ensure their devices are still supported by their manufacturers. They should also check the available support before purchasing a device. Unfortunately, there are too many examples of vendors abandoning devices that are still in wide use – sometimes even when they are still available to purchase. We hope vendors clearly communicate their support and lifecycle policies so that consumers can make educated choices."


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  • (Score: 2) by driverless on Sunday August 02 2020, @02:44AM

    by driverless (4770) on Sunday August 02 2020, @02:44AM (#1030133)

    Or don't buy the cheapest crap available. Not being paid to say this but I chose to pay a bit more for Draytek gear and they support their stuff more or less forever, or at least until the hardware is so obsolete you can't use it any more (ADSL1 routers and the like). If you're buying absolutely the cheapest crap you can get then you kinda need to expect that the way to get it updated is to buy a newer model of the same crap. When I do put in cheap disposable crap I expect to drop it in, expect no updates ever, and throw it away and get another if it fails (this is for situations where environmental conditions mean it probably won't last, so no point in spending extra on good-quality gear).

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