Submitted via IRC for TheMightyBuzzard
A vulnerability in Ghidra, the generic disassembler and decompiler released by the NSA in early March, could be exploited to execute code remotely, researchers say.
The flaw, an XML external entity (XXE) issue, was discovered in the Ghidra project loading process immediately after the tool was released.
Impacting the project open/restore, the vulnerability can be exploited by anyone able to trick a user into opening or restoring a specially crafted project, a GitHub report reveals.
To reproduce the issue, one would need to create a project, close it, then put an XXE payload in any of the XML files in the project directory. As soon as the project is opened, the payload is executed.
Now that's just embarrassing.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by realDonaldTrump on Thursday March 21 2019, @04:44PM (2 children)
You make it sound so complicated. It's not complicated. If you're a Friend -- Saudi, Israel or Norway -- you can have our Safe Cyber. Which reports back to N.S.A. If you're a Foe -- European Union, Korea, Iran, Cuba, Venezuela, Canada -- you're getting the Unsafe Cyber. Which reports back to N.S.A.
By the way, UK, right now, is a Foe. We're waiting for you to leave E.U., maybe we can be "friends" after that. But we won't wait forever!
(Score: 3, Touché) by DannyB on Thursday March 21 2019, @05:16PM
You didn't mention which list Russia is on. Or FoxNews.
If you eat an entire cake without cutting it, you technically only had one piece.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 22 2019, @04:55PM
With friends like that, who needs enemas?