Pwn2Own hacker: Safari is 'easy pickings'
Charlie Miller (right), the security researcher who won last year's Pwn2Own hacker contest, is predicting that Apple's Safari browser will be the easiest target this year.
In a note posted on the popular Daily Dave mailing list, Miller describes Safari as "easy pickin's" and forecasts that at least four zero-day Safari flaws will be used during the contest at CanSecWest later this month.
This year's contest will pit hackers against browsers and smart phones with Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari, Opera and Chrome among the high-profile targets. It will also include attacks against fully patched BlackBerry, Android, iPhone, Symbian and Windows Mobile phones in their default configurations.
Editor's Pick
Here are Miller's predictions:
Safari: hacked by 4 different people. Easy pickin's as usual.
Android: hacked by 1 person. Not too tough but no one owns one.
IE8, Firefox: Survive unscathed. The bugs to exploit equation is too hard for $5k.
iPhone, Symbian: Survive due to non-executable heap.
Blackberry, Windows Mobile, Chrome: I don't know enough to say anything intelligent. That said, they're probably hard/obscure and so survive.
Last year, Miller exploited a Safari flaw to hijack a fully patched MacBook Pro machine. He is also known for launching successful attacks against Apple's iPhone and Google's Android platform.
TippingPoint ZDI has more information on the rules and targets for this year's contest.
Commenting on this Article is closed.
Today's Most Popular
- Yahoo Includes Private Key in Source File For Axis Chrome Extension
- Researchers Unveil New Way to Trust Certificates
- FBI Warns Top Firms Of Anonymous Protest Hacks on May 25
- DNSChanger Lingers: 330k Systems Still Infected, 77,000 In The U.S.
- Defense Contractor Northrop Grumman Hiring For Offensive Cyber Ops
Most Commented Stories
-
Forget 'Brogrammers,' Women Have The Edge In DEFCON Social Engineering Contest (10)
-
Defense Contractor Northrop Grumman Hiring For Offensive Cyber Ops (14)
-
New York Lawmakers Want Anonymous Comments Banned (4)
-
DNSChanger Lingers: 330k Systems Still Infected, 77,000 In The U.S. (3)
-
FBI Warns Top Firms Of Anonymous Protest Hacks on May 25 (2)
Newsletter Sign-up
Take Our Poll
Listen to Latest Podcasts
-
-
You are missing some Flash content that should appear here! Perhaps your browser cannot display it, or maybe it did not initialize correctly.
-
You are missing some Flash content that should appear here! Perhaps your browser cannot display it, or maybe it did not initialize correctly.



