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Full Disclosure
mailing list archives
Re: XSS vulnerabilities in Google.com
From: "Morning Wood" <se_cur_ity () hotmail com>
Date: Wed, 21 Dec 2005 13:27:03 -0800
i see no "n3td3v" credits here... further, i cant concieve of the fact that you would even know what UTF-7 encoding is.
IMO all you have ever done is notice weird behavior when info is pulled into your Google group ( like your 1st post
about google groups about 9 months ago or so ) from other sources ( or replies ). XSS can be bad or benign depending on
if it is persistant in nature or not ( if not it requires a user to click a preformed XSS url ). And yes, persistant
XSS can be used to root users if coupled
with the latest browser exploit ( and any admin behind the sites firewall / corporate infrastructure ).
In the future may I suggest the folowing....
1. find your flaw
2. write an advisory
3. send it to the vendor
4. wait for response
5. wait for patches
6. disclose advisory formaly
7. stfu and find your next flaw
cheers,
mw
//=====================>> Security Advisory <<=====================//
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XSS vulnerabilities in Google.com
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--[ Author: Yair Amit , Watchfire Corporation http://www.watchfire.com
--[ Discovery Date: 15/11/2005
--[ Initial Vendor Response: 15/11/2005
--[ Issue solved: 01/12/2005
--[ Website: www.google.com
--[ Severity: High
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Current thread:
Re: XSS vulnerabilities in Google.com Morning Wood (Dec 21)
Re: XSS vulnerabilities in Google.com GroundZero Security (Dec 21)
RE: XSS vulnerabilities in Google.com Edward Pearson (Dec 21)
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