Blended Threats and JavaScript: A Plan for Permanent Network Compromise

Presented at Black Hat USA 2012, July 26, 2012, 3:30 p.m. (60 minutes)

During Black Hat 2006, it was shown how common Web browser attacks could be leveraged bypass perimeter firewalls and "Hack Intranet Websites from the Outside." In the years since, the fundamental problems were never addressed and the Intranet remains wide open, probably because the attack techniques described had important limitations. These limitations prevented mass scale and persistent compromise of network connected devices, which include but are not limited to home broadband routers. Now in 2012, with the help of new research and next-generation technologies like HTML5, browser-based Intranet attacks have overcome many of the old limitations and improved to a new degree of scary.

This presentation will cover state-of-the-art Web browser blended threats launched with JavaScript, using zero to minimal user interaction and complete every step of the exploit attack cycle. Starting with enumeration and discovery, escalating the attack further upstream and into embedded network devices, and ultimately mass-scale permanent compromise.


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