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Thread: SETI@home vulnerability

  1. #1

    SETI@home vulnerability

    This is a quote from www.net-security.org

    SETI@home Clients Information Leakage and Buffer Overflow Vulnerabilities
    Posted on 07 April 2003


    Information leakage and remotely
    exploitable buffer overflow in various SETI@home
    seti@home clients and the main server.

    Januari 15, 2002 by Berend-Jan Wever

    http://spoor12.edup.tudelft.nl http://setiathome.berkeley.edu

    Confirmed information leaking:
    This issue affects all clients.

    Confirmed remote exploitable:
    setiathome-3.03.i386-pc-linux-gnu-gnulibc2.1
    setiathome-3.03.i686-pc-linux-gnu-gnulibc2.1
    setiathome-3.03.i386-pc-linux-gnulibc1-static
    setiathome-3.03.i686-pc-linux-gnulibc1-static
    setiathome-3.03.i386-winnt-cmdline.exe
    i386-unknown-freebsd2.2.8 (Special thanks to Niels Heinen)
    SETI@home.exe (v3.07 Screensaver)

    Confirmed DoS-able using buffer overflow:
    The main seti@home server at shserver2.ssl.berkeley.edu

    Presumed vulnerable to buffer overflow:
    All other clients.
    BACKGROUND INFORMATION
    -----------------------------------------------------

    From "http://setiathome.berkeley.edu/" :
    "SETI@home is a scientific experiment that uses Internet-connected computers in the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI). You can participate by running a free program that downloads and analyzes radio telescope data. "
    "The SETI@home program is a special kind of screensaver. Like other screensavers it starts up when you leave your computer unattended, and it shuts down as soon as you return to work. What it does in the interim is unique. While you are getting coffee, or having lunch or sleeping, your computer will be helping the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence by analyzing data specially captured by the world's largest radio telescope. "
    "The client/screensaver is available for download only from this web page - we do not support SETI@home software obtained elsewhere. This software will upload and download data only from our data server here at Berkeley. The data server doesn't download any executable code to your computer. All in all, the screensaver is much safer than the browser you're running right now!"

    There are currently over four million registered users of seti@home. Over half a million of these users are "active"; they have returned at least one result within the last four weeks.

    THE VULNERABILITIES
    --------------------------------------------------------

    The seti@home clients use the HTTP protocol to download new workunits, user information and to register new users. The implementation leaves two security vulnerabilities:

    1) All information is send in plaintext across the network. This information includes the processor type and the operating system of the machine seti@home is running on.

    2) There is a bufferoverflow in the server responds handler. Sending an overly large string followed by a newline ('\n') character to the client will trigger this overflow. This has been tested with various versions of the client. All versions are presumed to have this flaw in some form.

    3) A similar buffer overflow seems to affect the main seti@home server at shserver2.ssl.berkeley.edu. It closes the connection after receiving a too large string of bytes followed by a '\n'.

    THE TECHNIQUE
    --------------------------------------------------------------

    1) Sniffing the information exposed by the seti@home client is trivial and very usefull to a malicious person planning an attack on a network. A passive scan of machines on a network can be made using any packetsniffer to grab the information from the network.

    2) All tested clients have similar buffer overflows, which allowed setting eip to an arbitrairy value which can lead to arbitrairy code execution. An attacker would have to reroute the connection the client tries to make to the seti@home webserver to a machine he or she controls. This can be done using various widely available spoofing tools. Seti@home also has the ability to use a HTTP-proxy, an attacker could also use the machine the PROXY runs on as a base for this attack. Routers can also be used as a base for this attack.

    3) Exploitation of the bug in the server has offcourse not been tested. Do understand that successfull exploitation of the bug in the server would offer a platform from which ALL seti@home clients can be exploited.

    THE EXPLOITS
    ---------------------------------------------------------------

    Attached to this mail you will find a sample exploit running on linux that will supply a remote shell to an attacker for various linux clients. It will crash the *BSD client, the windows commandline client and windows screensaver.

    TIMELINE -------------------------------------------------------------------

    2002/12/05 Information leakage discovered.
    2002/12/14 Bufferoverflow in client discovered.
    2002/12/31 Seti@home team contacted through their website
    http://setiathome.berkeley.edu/help.html.
    2003/01/07 Seti@home team contacted again.
    2003/01/14 Bufferoverflow in server discovered.
    2003/01/21 Seti@home team contacted again, this time through email.
    2003/01/21 Seti@home team confirmed the problem.
    2003/01/25 Seti@home team promissed fixed version are being build.
    2003/02/03 Seti@home team informed me about problems with the fixes for the win32 version.

    In more then three months, the seti@home has been unable to produce a patched version of the clients.

    THANKS
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------

    Special thanks go out to:
    - Aleph1 for "Smashing the Stack for Fun and Profit".
    - Niels Heinen for his work on exploiting seti@home on FreeBSD.
    - Blazde and the other 0dd folks for help with the win32 shellcode.



    Best regards,

    Berend-Jan Wever
    SkyLined@edup.tudelft.nl
    http://Spoor12.EduP.TUDelft.nl
    [glowpurple]www.networksynapse.net[/glowpurple]

  2. #2
    AO Decepticon CXGJarrod's Avatar
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    N00b> STFU i r teh 1337 (english: You must be mistaken, good sir or madam. I believe myself to be quite a good player. On an unrelated matter, I also apparently enjoy math.)

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