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CVE: CVE-2010-4033 CWE: - 525 bugs: - 51727 repo: vccs: - note: 'This is the original commit that added the for loop to add fields to autofill data automatically. ' commit: 6f2ff8526c54090bf6afe9c80f2d63551231e997 fixes: - note: '' commit: faa43b74c1f27b8f81c0e5d672ae9b62088ce29a - note: '' commit: cf2016d357ca3bc39895c05c691b4def860699e0 - note: '' commit: 4a103af9e1cced626a6b2b2e77c2e49da29ef619 - note: '' commit: 3355fbdbc15c9d66cc5d74004f8cdc243afa4054 bounty: date: amount: references: [] lessons: yagni: note: applies: question: | Are there any common lessons we have learned from class that apply to this vulnerability? In other words, could this vulnerability serve as an example of one of those lessons? Leave "applies" blank or put false if you did not see that lesson (you do not need to put a reason). Put "true" if you feel the lesson applies and put a quick explanation of how it applies. Don't feel the need to claim that ALL of these apply, but it's pretty likely that one or two of them apply. If you think of another lesson we covered in class that applies here, feel free to give it a small name and add one in the same format as these. serial_killer: note: applies: complex_inputs: note: applies: distrust_input: note: | The reason this applies is that the CVE was a issue of saving potentially malicous input/overflowing the store of saved data to and crashing the browser from overloading it's saved data. applies: true least_privilege: note: applies: native_wrappers: note: applies: defense_in_depth: note: applies: secure_by_default: note: applies: environment_variables: note: applies: security_by_obscurity: note: applies: frameworks_are_optional: note: applies: reviews: - 3143005 - 3151006 - 3110007 - 3145007 - 3276006 - 3169019 - 3149003 - 3169008 - 3286006 upvotes: 2 mistakes: answer: | This vulnerability appears to be an oversight in a potential line of attack which was then caught later on. The infobar that originally designated form data as being saved no longer appered so the user would not know when data was being saved. Because this infobar no longer existed, it was possible to fill/overfill the store of data malicously and crash the browser. question: | In your opinion, after all of this research, what mistakes were made that led to this vulnerability? Coding mistakes? Design mistakes? Maintainability? Requirements? Miscommunications? Look at the CWE entry for this vulnerability and examine the mitigations they have written there. Are they doing those? Does the fix look proper? Use those questions to inspire your answer. Don't feel obligated to answer every one. Write a thoughtful entry here that those ing the software engineering industry would find interesting. announced: '2010-10-21 15:00:04.647000000 -04:00' subsystem: name: webdata answer: Webdata, specifically autofill as the code lives in the "webdata" directory. question: | What subsystems was the mistake in? Look at the path of the source code files code that were fixed to get directory names. Look at comments in the code. Look at the bug reports how the bug report was tagged. Examples: "clipboard", "gpu", "ssl", "speech", "renderer" discovered: date: '2010-07-03' answer: | A Google employee noticed that an infobar was removed and would allow auto-submitted forms to save autofill data. This is an issue because a malicously designed website could fill the autofill data of the local browser to crash the browser and make the desireable autofill data inaccessible to the user. google: true contest: question: | How was this vulnerability discovered? Go to the bug report and read the conversation to find out how this was originally found. Answer in longform below in "answer", fill in the date in YYYY-MM-DD, and then determine if the vulnerability was found by a Google employee (you can tell from their email address). If it's clear that the vulenrability was discovered by a contest, fill in the name there. The "automated" flag can be true, false, or nil. The "google" flag can be true, false, or nil. If there is no evidence as to how this vulnerability was found, then you may leave the entries blank except for "answer". Write down where you looked in "answer". automated: false description: | Chrome does not verify that the user is the one submitting data when saving auto-complete data. If Chrome stores the data automatically it can overflow what chrome is able to handle and crash the browser. An attack targeting this vulnerability would be a malicous site continously filling and submitting a form to overflow the possible storage of auto-fill data and crashing the browser. A Google employee determined that in the matter of a few seconds a form doing that would be able to crash the browser. unit_tested: fix: true code: true answer: Automated unit tests were added to help solve this vulnerability and ensure it doesn't happen again. question: | Were automated unit tests involved in this vulnerability? Was the original code unit tested, or not unit tested? Did the fix involve improving the automated tests? For the "code" answer below, look not only at the fix but the surrounding code near the fix and determine if and was there were unit tests involved for this module. For the "fix" answer below, check if the fix for the vulnerability involves adding or improving an automated test to ensure this doesn't happen again. major_events: answer: events: - date: name: - date: name: question: | Please record any major events you found in the history of this vulnerability. Was the code rewritten at some point? Was a nearby subsystem changed? Did the team change? The event doesn't need to be directly related to this vulnerability, rather, we want to capture what the development team was dealing with at the time. curation_level: 1 CWE_instructions: | Please go to cwe.mitre.org and find the most specific, appropriate CWE entry that describes your vulnerability. (Tip: this may not be a good one to start with - spend time understanding this vulnerability before making your choice!) bounty_instructions: | If you came across any indications that a bounty was paid out for this vulnerability, fill it out here. Or correct it if the information already here was wrong. Otherwise, leave it blank. interesting_commits: answer: commits: - note: commit: - note: commit: question: | Are there any interesting commits between your VCC(s) and fix(es)? Write a brief (under 100 words) description of why you think this commit was interesting in light of the lessons learned from this vulnerability. Any emerging themes? If there are no interesting commits, demonstrate that you completed this section by explaining what happened between the VCCs and the fix. curated_instructions: | If you are manually editing this file, then you are "curating" it. Set the entry below to "true" as soon as you start. This will enable additional integrity checks on this file to make sure you fill everything out properly. If you are a student, we cannot accept your work as finished unless curated is set to true. upvotes_instructions: | For the first round, ignore this upvotes number. For the second round of reviewing, you will be giving a certain amount of upvotes to each vulnerability you see. Your peers will tell you how interesting they think this vulnerability is, and you'll add that to the upvotes score on your branch. announced_instructions: | Was there a date that this vulnerability was announced to the world? You can find this in changelogs, blogs, bug reports, or perhaps the CVE date. A good source for this is Chrome's Stable Release Channel (https://chromereleases.googleblog.com/). Please enter your date in YYYY-MM-DD format. fixes_vcc_instructions: | Please put the commit hash in "commit" below (see my example in CVE-2011-3092.yml). Fixes and VCCs follow the same format. description_instructions: | You can get an initial description from the CVE entry on cve.mitre.org. These descriptions are a fine start, but they can be kind of jargony. Rewrite this description in your own words. Make it interesting and easy to read to anyone with some programming experience. We can always pull up the NVD description later to get more technical. Try to still be specific in your description, but remove Chromium-specific stuff. Remove references to versions, specific filenames, and other jargon that outsiders to Chromium would not understand. Technology like "regular expressions" is fine, and security phrases like "invalid write" are fine to keep too. |
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