Uncommonly Discussed Common Vulnerability In Webservers
by - Thursday, January 1, 1970 at 12:00 AM
As of right now all that I could think about is definitely cache poisoning and edge cases in role based authorization. There's also leaks on indihome database some days ago, that shits wack. I wouldn't expect those who did it to need a particularly large toolset to be honest. But I wonder what's the specifics of the hack if we can even inquire such details.
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sleepthegod is that you?
I do not sell data. Please do not ask.

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(August 22, 2022, 02:15 AM)thrax Wrote: sleepthegod is that you?


probably it is.

Atleast have something on , What this gibberish ?
Those who share kindness, I will repay that payment 10-fold, and Who do injustice, try to hurt the innocent, I will repay that injustice a 1000 times over.
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> sleepthegod

unfortunately not.. can't believe now I'm a narc wtf i just want to get some credits for indihome breaks man
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lmao real and true
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@BigElya I just want to get 8 credits to download the indihome datadump dude, leave me alone
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Regarding cache/edge issues I remember a few years ago steam had an issue with their caching system that would display other peoples account information instead of your own.
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(August 22, 2022, 02:14 AM)breachedagainhuh Wrote: As of right now all that I could think about is definitely cache poisoning and edge cases in role based authorization. There's also leaks on indihome database some days ago, that shits wack. I wouldn't expect those who did it to need a particularly large toolset to be honest. But I wonder what's the specifics of the hack if we can even inquire such details.


Not sure though, perhaps you should try to look into Linux's HeartBleed vulnerability.
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(August 26, 2022, 12:49 PM)demival Wrote:
(August 22, 2022, 02:14 AM)breachedagainhuh Wrote: As of right now all that I could think about is definitely cache poisoning and edge cases in role based authorization. There's also leaks on indihome database some days ago, that shits wack. I wouldn't expect those who did it to need a particularly large toolset to be honest. But I wonder what's the specifics of the hack if we can even inquire such details.


Not sure though, perhaps you should try to look into Linux's HeartBleed vulnerability.


heartbleed? the ssl one? no way
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