Home   Forum    Forum   Help About Arcade Login Register  

User

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
28/04/2026, 05:16 PM

Login with username, password and session length

ShoutBox

22/06/2023, 10:15 AM Syklone - ..... hi
18/02/2023, 07:10 PM Damithttps://discord.gg/fYqDFYx
18/02/2023, 07:09 PM Damit - join us on Discord https://discord.com/inv... ite/fYqDFYx
29/11/2022, 12:19 PM BoHiCa - YESSSSSS
26/10/2022, 04:27 PM Victor9-5 - yooooooooooooo!
21/05/2021, 06:19 AM DonutKing - First post
28/08/2020, 08:39 AM Damit - its because we are all on discord now mrx
29/07/2020, 07:42 PM MrX - Its a bit dead round here
29/07/2020, 07:42 PM MrX - Anybody playing COD 
26/03/2020, 10:52 AM Epsoma - Hey Team. Locked down in self isolation. Hope you all are good.

View All

Pages: [1]
  Print  
Author Topic: Vulnerability Detection  (Read 1503 times)
bageled
Veteran Member

*

Karma: 375
Posts: 3330


Consoles are the future


Awards Awards Awards
« on: 15/06/2012, 08:03 AM »

Came across this software this morning.

It is supposed to check for software that is vulnerable to malicious attacks.

Does anyone have any experience with it or recommendations?


http://secunia.com/vulnerability_scanning/corporate/wsus_sccm_3rd_third_party_patching/
Logged

Syklone
AWARD: THE AI-FONDLER (27 Nov 2010)
Legacy Veteran

*

Karma: 78
Posts: 1534



Awards Awards Awards
« Reply #1 on: 15/06/2012, 08:56 AM »

Sorry Bageled - no experience with this one. Reminds me a bit like Kaseya though at a quick glance.
Logged

This space for rent.
naf
Guest
« Reply #2 on: 15/06/2012, 08:58 AM »

it's just patch manangement, knows what software is installed on a network patches for you if it can tell you what you need to do if it can't... works in large corps, possibly not necessary for a small business like yours.
Logged
DonutKing
AWARDED - MR DEATH INC 2010 - FOR GAYEST PICTURE IN A THREAD
Legacy Veteran

*

Karma: 503
Posts: 4229


I could fit two of you in my jeans. Idiot.


WWW Awards Awards Awards
« Reply #3 on: 15/06/2012, 09:12 AM »

Yeah I wouldn't worry about this for a small company, just keep your antivirus and microsoft/java/flash/acrobat/web browser patches up to date from the internet and you'll be right. I assume a business of your size isn't running any publicly accessible services from its office internet connection.

Do you have any PLC's to control your printers or other industrial equipment attached to your network? They're a bigger worry as they are usually never updated or patched, ever, for fear it will break something. This thing will probably just go berserk when it sees those.

Logged

Carples
Senior Member



Karma: 17
Posts: 297


Evil Genius


Awards Awards Awards
« Reply #4 on: 15/06/2012, 09:51 PM »

PLC's are normally not updateable the software version is fixed in rom. and only respond to very specific commands and not to broad cast requests. most companies dont have people with skills to work on them so yes they would be terrified of causing a crash because they don't have program backups or the passwords and could not load them if they did. the guys that do charge a lot, and rewriting a machine program can take ages, but programs can not be changed if they are password protected. a lot of the time even the manufacturer can not extract a password from a protected file. very annoying programs with password
Logged

DirtyHarry
Member



Karma: 41
Posts: 370



Awards Awards Awards
« Reply #5 on: 15/06/2012, 10:05 PM »

I use secunia PSI on my machines since its free and pretty good at autopatching outdated software.
Logged

DonutKing
AWARDED - MR DEATH INC 2010 - FOR GAYEST PICTURE IN A THREAD
Legacy Veteran

*

Karma: 503
Posts: 4229


I could fit two of you in my jeans. Idiot.


WWW Awards Awards Awards
« Reply #6 on: 15/06/2012, 10:22 PM »

Quote
PLC's are normally not updateable the software version is fixed in rom. and only respond to very specific commands and not to broad cast requests.

While this is true, if the PLC talks TCP/IP and its on the network then it can be molested in a variety of ways. If it has a 10 year old TCP/IP stack then it vulnerable to a variety of exploits regardless of whatever control protocol it uses.

I've seen machines crash when scanned with a vulnerability scanner program, and obviously on a factory floor that could spell disaster if that machine is controlling something important on a busy day.

Stuff like that should really be on a segregated network (preferably with an air gap) but in reality this doesn't happen as much as it should.

Look up the stuxnet virus if you want to read about some malware that specifically targets certain types of PLCs and SCADA systems.
Logged

Pages: [1]
  Print  
 

TinyPortal v1.0 beta 4 © Bloc
Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines
Simple Audio Video Embedder

This website looks best when viewed at 1920x1200
Page created in 0.068 seconds with 49 queries.