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| Subject: | Re: [Full-disclosure] 0day: PDF pwns Windows |
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| Date: | Tue, 25 Sep 2007 15:12:23 -0400 |
Daylight come and me wanna go home... This one time, at band camp, Thor (Hammer of God) wrote:
For the record, the original term "O-Day" was coined by a dyslexic security engineer who listened to too much Harry Belafonte while working all night on a drink of rum. It's true. Really. t-----Original Message----- From: Roland Kuhn [mailto:rkuhn@e18.physik.tu-muenchen.de] Sent: Tuesday, September 25, 2007 10:58 AM To: Lamont Granquist Cc: Chad Perrin; Crispin Cowan; Casper.Dik@Sun.COM; Gadi Evron; pdp (architect); bugtraq@securityfocus.com; full- disclosure@lists.grok.org.uk Subject: Re: 0day: PDF pwns Windows On 25 Sep 2007, at 00:57, Lamont Granquist wrote:The exploit is not made public by its use. The exploit is not even made public by (back-channel) sharing amongst the hacker/cracker community. The exploit is only made public if detected or the vulnerability is disclosed. Until detected/disclosed the hacker/ cracker can use their 31337 0day spl01tz to break into whichever vulnerable machines they like. 0day exploits are valuable becausetheopposition is ignorant of them. Posting exploits to BUGTRAQ, however, inherently makes them not 0day...And my ignorant self thought until this thread that the "0" in thetermreferred to the number of days of head start granted to the vendor. Silly me. Because that would make all vulnerabilities publishedwithoutprior warning to the vendor a "0day"... Roland (who seems to remember that this was once the meaning of this term)
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Lawrence MacIntyre 865.574.8696 macintyrelp@ornl.gov
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Cyber Security and Information Infrastructure Research Group
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