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Hack Sneaks Past Firewall to Intranet

Black Hat researcher will demonstrate yet another way to use DNS pinning bug to get inside the corporate network

Jul 18, 2007 | 07:13 AM

By Kelly Jackson Higgins
DarkReading

The DNS pinning bugs just keep coming: A researcher has proven you can bypass the corporate firewall by converting the victim's browser into a proxy server. (See Old Flaw Threatens Web 2.0.)

David Byrne, security architect for EchoStar Satellite, will demonstrate next month at Black Hat USA how the DNS pinning (a.k.a. DNS rebinding) vulnerability in Java can be used to leap past the perimeter firewall and access the corporate intranet. The browser basically becomes a proxy server for the attacker.

"Everyone is at risk, and for a long time they've been relying on their network firewalls to protect them from an attack like this," Byrne says. "This is one method of bypassing perimeter firewalls... In the end, you can't completely trust your perimeter firewalls."

DNS pinning/rebinding is not a new vulnerability, but it will be one of the big topics at Black Hat, thanks to a resurgence of research on the bug in the past few months. It's found in browsers, Java, Flash, and Adobe, and has some serious implications for Web 2.0-type apps that pack more code and action onto the client.

Another Black Hat researcher, Dan Kaminsky, director of penetration testing for IOActive, will demonstrate a proof-of-concept exploit that lets attackers set up a VPN connection straight to the victim's corporate network.

Byrne's approach to exploiting the bug is different. He has written a tool that automates changes to DNS and firewall rules, as well as for sending commands to the attack payload. He'll first show a JavaScript-based attack/payload that "tunnels" HTTP traffic to any server on the victim's corporate network. It will exploit cross-site scripting, SQL injection, and other server flaws to extract sensitive data.

Next he'll use a JavaScript-Java applet combination to turn the browser into a Web proxy, providing access inside. Most protocols (not just HTTP) can be tunneled this way -- through the browser to the intranet, Byrne says.

"I’ll also discuss how payloads can be created in Adobe Flash, and in pure Java" rather than JavaScript, he says. Byrne's presentation will be on Wednesday, August 1.

— Kelly Jackson Higgins, Senior Editor, Dark Reading

  • EchoStar Satellite LLC
  • Black Hat Inc.


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