200 Vendors Impacted By DNS Poisoning Flaw

Share post:

Researchers from security firm Nozomi Networks have uncovered a critical vulnerability in third-party code libraries used by hundreds of vendors.

The vulnerability is a DNS poisoning flaw. DNS poisoning allows attackers to replace the legitimate DNS lookup for a site with malicious IP addresses that can disguise as the real sites as they try to install malware.

In this case, the flaw allows attackers with access to the connection between an affected device and the internet to poison DNS requests used to translate domains to IP addresses.

The flaw is located in uClibc and uClibc fork uClibc-ng. The two libraries provide alternatives to the standard C library for embedded Linux, Nozom.

According to the researchers, 200 vendors incorporate at least one of the libraries into wares including Linksys WRT54G- Wireless-G Broadband Router, NetGear WG602 wireless router, and most Axis network cameras, embedded Gentoo, Buildroot, LEAF Bering uClibc, and Tuxscreen Linux Phone.

The sources for this piece include a story in ArsTechnica.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Related articles

Cyber Security Today, Week in Review for week ending Friday May 17, 2024

Welcome to Cyber Security Today. This is the Week in Review for the week ending Friday, May 17th,...

Cyber Security Today, May 17, 2024 – Malware hiding in Apache Tomcat servers

Malware hiding in Apache Tomcat servers, new backdoors found, and more Welcome to Cyber Security Today. It's Friday, May...

MIT students exploit blockchain vulnerability to steal 25 million dollars

Two MIT students have been implicated in a highly sophisticated cryptocurrency heist, where they reportedly exploited a vulnerability...

Microsoft’s AI success may spell defeat for it’s climate goals

Microsoft's ambitious strides in AI technology are now posing a significant challenge to its own climate goals, as...

Become a member

New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways