Re: Skype Network Remote DoS Exploit

看板Bugtraq作者時間18年前 (2007/08/22 01:32), 編輯推噓0(000)
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Skype made a funny "explanation" of the problem... Lets say, people download updates on Tuesday in the US, on Wednesday in Europe and just happen to reboot their computers simultaneously on Thursday? :) As I remember, there were two primary theories of the problem source: 1.. Microsoft's updates 2.. DoS attack It seems Skype has decided to make their own theory based on these two: so it was a DoS, but not an attack, and it was updates fault, but not Microsoft's. I do believe that the DoS Exploit, published at www.securitylab.ru, might have such an impact, but it's impossible to prove anything and it's not necessary. I just would like to say, that Skype could came up with more realistic story, for example: someone made a mistake in the code, or they were trying to implement new feature and everyone would believe, even me :) Best regards, Valery Marchuk www.SecurityLab.ru ----- Original Message ----- From: "Steven M. Christey" <coley@mitre.org> To: <tecklord@argocom.cv.ua>; <bugtraq@securityfocus.com> Sent: Monday, August 20, 2007 8:39 PM Subject: Re: Skype Network Remote DoS Exploit > > The outage being experienced by Skype was apparently due to massive > simultaneous reboots and reconnects after systems installed their > Windows patches. > > from http://heartbeat.skype.com/2007/08/what_happened_on_august_16.html: > > The disruption was triggered by a massive restart of our users' > computers across the globe within a very short timeframe as they > re-booted after receiving a routine set of patches through Windows > Update. > > The high number of restarts affected Skype's network resources. > This caused a flood of log-in requests, which, combined with the > lack of peer-to-peer network resources, prompted a chain reaction > that had a critical impact. > > I wonder how many other services are impacted by simultaneous Windows > scheduled updates. > > Anyway... given that this was going on at the time the SecurityLab.ru > exploit was released, and the exploit only claims a DoS (and only > seems to make a series of requests to long URIs), was the exploit > actually effective, or was the "DoS" just part of the larger outage? > > - Steve
文章代碼(AID): #16oo6g00 (Bugtraq)
文章代碼(AID): #16oo6g00 (Bugtraq)