|
Full Disclosure
mailing list archives
Re: Google vulnerabilities with PoC
From: "Nicholas Lemonias." <lem.nikolas () googlemail com>
Date: Thu, 13 Mar 2014 19:33:41 +0000
So in terms of permissions. What's the different between
admin.youtube.comand a normal youtube user?
I assume that the admin has a full permission set. If that's the case, that
means it is a valid vulnerability for the reason being that the integrity
of the service is impacted. The youtube user circumvents the design and
gets arbitrary write (w) permissions of any file-type. (The access control
matrix is bypassed here)
Since YouTube by design is not an FTP Service, and even Google drive is a
paid service - Then yes it is a vulnerability. Why are you guys looking for
impact elsewhere? The impact is to the integrity of the service - arbitrary
write permissions.
On Thu, Mar 13, 2014 at 5:28 PM, Michal Zalewski <lcamtuf () coredump cx>wrote:
The only reasonable way to 'exploit' the bug is using youtube as a
"personal storage" uploading non-video files to your own profile: so
what?
That would require a way to retrieve the stored data, which - as I
understand - isn't possible here (although the report seems a bit
hard-to-parse). From what I recall, you can just upload a blob of data
and essentially see it disappear.
We do have quite a few services where you can legitimately upload and
share nearly-arbitrary content, though. Google Drive is a good
example.
/mz
_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
By Date
By Thread
Current thread:
Re: Google vulnerabilities with PoC Julius Kivimäki (Mar 13)
(Thread continues...)
|