<<< Date Index >>>     <<< Thread Index >>>

Re: Netscape Navigator 7.2 failure to isolate browser tabs (was Re: Computer Network Defence Vulnerability Alert State)



This is a known issue with Apples Java plugin ... not netscape or mozilla.
See: http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=162134

It has to due with the plugin ignoring clipRect and NPWindow


On Aug 26, 2004, at 10:51 AM, john.courcoul@xxxxxxx wrote:

Didn't think I'd ever get the chance to report some form of vulnerability, but I did. Minor, granted, but a bug nonetheless.

Use the latest browser from Netscape, Gecko/20040804 Netscape/7.2, set up for tabbed browsing, on a MacOS X 10.3.5 platform with all the latest patches. Open Andy Cuff's "radar" page in the first tab: it sets up two scrolling displays (Security News and Vulnerabilities) on the left side of the window and a date ticker in the middle, under "Operational Picture". Open a new tab, which should be completely independent and allow you to browse another site without interference. Not a chance: the scrolling displays and the date ticker promptly highjack the new pane and display their info on it, on top of any page you should happen to load there. And the scrollers are "live" in whatever tab they have highjacked: click on any of the items they are displaying, and the corresponding page gets loaded on the highjacked tab, NOT on the original "radar" tab. Only until you close the "radar" tab do the scrollers and ticker go away in all other tabs.

Works the other way around too: create a bunch of tabs and load all sorts of different sites on them. On the very last tab, open Andy's page. It promptly takes over all tabs and splashes the scrollers and ticker all over the place.

In this case, just a nuisance, but might conceivably be misused. Since this information is placed on top of the highjacked tabs, and will cause a new page to load on that tab, a carefully crafted scroller or ticker could misdirect a user trying to do banking on a tab to be redirected to a hostile server elsewhere (i.e., carefully place the scroller on top of the "submit" button, tell the user that the operation failed and get them to retype their private info.)

Could this be classified as "phishing" ?

J. Courcoul

Andy Cuff wrote:

Hi All,
As a great believer in being able to track emerging vulnerabilities with
minimal effort, I have created another "Alert State" image.
http://securitywizardry.com/radar.htm However, I have tried to make it a
lot more granular dividing the image up into OS and Applications and
reducing the alert states to just 3. At present I'm tracking the
vulnerabilities myself, though I'm hoping some kind hearted vulnerability alert service such as one of these http://securitywizardry.com/alert.htm will offer to notify me when significant vulnerabilities occur that may warrant a change in an enterprises CND posture. I hope you find it of use,
enjoy!

Advice, criticism, bitchin' etc welcomed as always

-andy cuff
Talisker's Computer Security Portal
Computer Network Defence Ltd
http://www.securitywizardry.com