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| Subject: | Re: [Full-disclosure] 4 Questions: Latest IE vulnerability, Firefox vs IE security, User vs Admin risk profile, and browsers coded in 100% Managed Verifiable code |
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| Date: | Mon, 27 Mar 2006 17:04:01 -0500 |
On 3/27/06, Pavel Kankovsky <peak@argo.troja.mff.cuni.cz> wrote:
On Mon, 27 Mar 2006, Brian Eaton wrote:I wasn't sure if Windows actually supported mandatory access controls, so I poked around on Microsoft's web site a bit. Yes, Windows supports MAC.MS Windows does not support MAC. Its future version (i.e. Vista) might support some half-baked (*) pseudo-MAC.
Thanks for the info. I'm not a windows expert by any mean, just going by what I read on their web site. ;-)
In his original note, Dinis raised a good point: even a restricted browser has access to all kinds of sensitive personal information, such as passwords to web sites. MAC would not prevent an exploit from stealing that kind of data.Nonsense. MAC was invented by soldiers and spooks to protect confidentiality. (The use of MAC to protect integrity is, in fact, an afterthought.) Properly implemented and configured MAC can prevent the leakage of confidential (i.e. sensitive personal) information to (unauthorized) web sites.
You lost me here. How would you design a MAC policy that lets firefox remember my password for a web site, but doesn't let arbitrary code running via a buffer overflow get at that same password? Regards, Brian _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/