Hackers claim to
have found a new
vulnerability in the cryptographic library as serious as Heartbleed, and
are selling it for 2.5 bitcoins
Security experts have expressed doubts about a hacker
claim that there's a new vulnerability in the patched version of OpenSSL, the
widely used cryptographic library repaired in early April.
A group of five hackers writes in a posting on Pastebin
that they worked for two weeks to find the bug and developed code to exploit
it. They've offered the code for the price of 2.5 bitcoins, around $870.
A new flaw
in OpenSSL could pose just as much of a threat as Heartbleed did. But the
hackers' claim was met with immediate suspicion on Full Disclosure, a forum for
discussing vulnerability reports.
One commentator, Todd Bennett, wrote the technical
description of their claim is "rather extraordinary."
The open-source OpenSSL code is used by millions of web
sites to create encrypted
communications between client computers and servers. The flaw disclosed in
early April, nicknamed "Heartbleed," can be abused to reveal login
credentials or a server's private SSL key.
More than two-thirds of the websites affected by the flaw
have patched OpenSSL, according to McAfee.
The hackers said they've found a buffer overflow
vulnerability that is similar to Heartbleed. They claim they've spotted a
missing bounds check in the handling of the variable
"DOPENSSL_NO_HEARTBEATS."
"We could successfully overflow the
'DOPENSSL_NO_HEARTBEATS' and retrieve 64kb chunks of data again on the updated
version," they wrote.
They have not published their exploit code, so there is
no way to verify their claim. The group provided an email address for
questions, but did not immediately respond to a query.
A Google search showed the same email address has been
used in other offers for data on Pastebin. In March, it was used in a Pastebin
posting advertising a trove of data from Mt. Gox, the defunct Tokyo-based
bitcoin exchange that was hacked.
The same advertisement also offered database dumps from
"carding" websites, or those selling stolen credit card data, and
data from CryptoAve, another virtual currency exchange that's been attacked by
hackers. Scammers often try to make money by falsely claiming they have data of
interest to the hacking community.
The Heartbleed flaw has since touched off an effort to
strengthen the security of widely used open-source products. The OpenSSL
Project, for example, had just one full-time employee and only received about
$2,000 in donations annual despite its critical role in protecting communications.
On Thursday, a group of technology companies and
organizations launched the Core Infrastructure Initiative, a project intended
to generate funds for full-time developers on important open-source products.
The group's participants include Amazon Web Services,
Cisco, Dell, Facebook, Fujitsu, Google, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, NetApp,
Rackspace, VMware and The Linux Foundation.
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