backdoors like this should be illegal.

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2025

Комментарии • 700

  • @LowLevelTV
    @LowLevelTV  12 дней назад +46

    wanna learn to hack? join the waitlist for my new platform -> stacksmash.io

    • @Veptis
      @Veptis 12 дней назад +2

      Surely the real sing up is an API endpoint I have to enumerate myself 🤔

    • @user-ju5wk3iu1k
      @user-ju5wk3iu1k 12 дней назад +1

      title seems 500000/15000 times more than actual leaked passwords 👻

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt 12 дней назад +2

      Ahh "I TOLD YOU SO!!" :D Funneling ALL your traffic through a single choke point is worse than spreading it out via direct connection and HTTPS/TLS. The only good use case for VPN's is geo-location bypass, but even a simple proxy will do that too.

    • @Hash-Slinging-Slasher
      @Hash-Slinging-Slasher 11 дней назад +1

      Wouldn't care to see ads if they didn't make them sexual, spam/scam or fetishy ads like hero wars games that I constantly got. So take your moral high ground and shove it till ads are appropriate for users, there should be atleast a team of people to go though ads and vet them before the consumer can see it.

  • @Sam-th4jl
    @Sam-th4jl 12 дней назад +902

    generous calling that a backdoor, it's pretty much the front door

    • @ped7g
      @ped7g 12 дней назад +30

      no no no no... it's .... magic!

    • @seedmole
      @seedmole 12 дней назад +36

      "Speak friend and enter"

    • @Yadobler
      @Yadobler 12 дней назад

      Honestly I never heard of fortinet until I subscribed to my local govt vulnerability mail list and every week I see at least some cve related to fortinet

    • @ThatOneWeeb420
      @ThatOneWeeb420 12 дней назад +4

      a front door is still too generous, it's basically an open field

    • @esoqueexiste
      @esoqueexiste 12 дней назад +10

      They wanted to put a backdoor just besides the front door

  • @Deniil2000
    @Deniil2000 12 дней назад +1068

    it's been 0 days since a security company product actually reduces your security

    • @lolo_o4309
      @lolo_o4309 12 дней назад +74

      Do you mean increases your security?

    • @forivall
      @forivall 12 дней назад +16

      Classic Fortinet

    • @Deniil2000
      @Deniil2000 12 дней назад +1

      @lolo_o4309 no, i'm very skeptical towards all these security solutions. They are proprietary, you don't know what they actually do. And they can backfire, see Crowdstrike for example.
      I think it's better to just have a secure minimal network without any such devices.

    • @lolo_o4309
      @lolo_o4309 12 дней назад +23

      @@Deniil2000 Thanks for clarifying your intentions. I am guessing your first language isn't English, as the sentence you wrote would mean that security companies increase your security. Just think about "reduced security" as "made security worse" and "increased security" as "made security better".
      I think if you look at your first statement again with the substitution e.g. "0 days since a security product made security worse", makes it more clear that if 0 days have past since such a product made security worse, there must have been one that made security better.
      Or you substitute "security" with something like "attack surface". If the security is good the attack surface is small.

    • @no_name4796
      @no_name4796 12 дней назад +29

      @@lolo_o4309 read again the comment :-)

  • @GabrielM01
    @GabrielM01 12 дней назад +833

    As for the ad thing, i wouldnt use Ad blockers if the ads were safe and not predatory, for my parents pc for example if i dont enable the ad blocker in a week they will install every toolbar out there, blocking ads is a security thing more than a privacy or piracy thing.

    • @Nov1706
      @Nov1706 12 дней назад +199

      It would be unethical if Google didn't put literal scams at the top of the SERP because scam artists paid them for the space. There's nothing unethical about blocking online advertisements because they themselves aren't ethical.

    • @kuhluhOG
      @kuhluhOG 12 дней назад +80

      yeah, there are at this point even government agencies from multiple countries which recommend their citizen to use adblockers for security purposes

    • @tonysolar284
      @tonysolar284 12 дней назад +60

      Blocking ads does not = piracy, just wait for that 0day ad malware that takes the world by storm.

    • @babayega1717
      @babayega1717 12 дней назад +27

      Yeah, I LOLed when he sai that.. If you want to pay content creators as a creator just buy YTB premium. ( All creators are playing dumb about its constant and volitale price increases already, so I see no issue with them paying for it openly).

    • @SS-gu2tx
      @SS-gu2tx 12 дней назад +11

      To be fair Brave Ads are far more dangerous than anything they block.

  • @grakkal
    @grakkal 12 дней назад +167

    I respect your ethics about not using an ad-blocker, but I personally consider it an essential security product. I've done IT for lawyers who are not security-minded. At all. I would be called out at least once a month to disinfect, or re-install someone's PC. Antivirus was not spotting the infected file until it was too late, and no one could figure out how they were getting infected.
    This might sound like hyperbole, but after I installed ad-blockers on all of their PCs, I never had to disinfect another one. YMMV, but I consider it a necessity.

    • @tvuser9529
      @tvuser9529 11 дней назад +20

      It's true. Ads are too dangerous, in addition to giving a horrible reading / viewing experience. I support my favourite creators directly. If the others want to block me for using an ad blocker, fine, go ahead.

    • @Dio_07
      @Dio_07 9 дней назад +6

      There's a reason that ad blocking is part of the ACSC Essential 8.

    • @thought_torrent
      @thought_torrent 8 дней назад

      He earns from watching ads

    • @AricGardnerMontreal
      @AricGardnerMontreal 6 дней назад +1

      yeah becasue they clicked on the ads

    • @correabuscar
      @correabuscar 2 дня назад +1

      @@AricGardnerMontreal they don't always have to click, just displaying it can be enough

  • @forivall
    @forivall 12 дней назад +255

    Fun fact: fortinet was caught violating the gpl on the linux kernel in the early 2000s

    • @seansingh4421
      @seansingh4421 11 дней назад +29

      With lube or no lube ? 😂😂

    • @mikumikupog
      @mikumikupog 10 дней назад +4

      @@seansingh4421 🤣🤣🤣

    • @otaxhu
      @otaxhu 9 дней назад

      @@seansingh4421 lol

    • @_efault
      @_efault 9 дней назад +9

      @@seansingh4421 DRY .... except they did repeat themselves, over and over and over

    • @TomAtkinson
      @TomAtkinson 8 дней назад

      Do you think Fortinet mite (currently) owe the linux mainline a few patches? Assume they still use linux kernel presently? And assuming they wrote innovative advanced networking patches, eg assembly code accelerator sections for tcp queue etc.

  • @KeldonSlayer
    @KeldonSlayer 11 дней назад +99

    I admire that statement you made at ~30 seconds, on how you don't use an adblocker because you make money off ads. I'm quite the same but opposite, I decided to not run ads on my website because I run an adblocker 24/7 and consider it to be wrong to then put ads up.

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam 10 дней назад +15

      The sites I used to run had ads (and for a time, really made bank on them.) But I still tell everyone to use an adblocker. Ads are annoying, waste your time and bandwidth, and increasing are used to infect people's machines. Had the latter happen repeatedly on my sites - ad companies are HORRIBLE at policing this shit.

    • @T1Oracle
      @T1Oracle 8 дней назад +3

      I'd rather have a donation link.

  • @TuxTuxedo-oc9kg
    @TuxTuxedo-oc9kg 12 дней назад +234

    I would have laughed about a nord vpn sponsorship

    • @lizardkeeper100
      @lizardkeeper100 12 дней назад +26

      "this video is brought to you by nord v... nah I'm just messing with you"

    • @LowLevelTV
      @LowLevelTV  12 дней назад +105

      ive thought about doing exactly this but 1.) would still piss people off and 2.) not trying to get sued lmao

    • @by010
      @by010 12 дней назад +6

      @@LowLevelTV You can address the getting sued part by saing "This video is sponsored by new VPN provider... nah, jk jk".

    • @lizardkeeper100
      @lizardkeeper100 12 дней назад +2

      @ I think you could get away with it if you were talking about how vpn's aren't all they are claimed to be. satire is covered under free speech however I would talk to a lawyer first.

    • @by010
      @by010 12 дней назад +4

      @@lizardkeeper100 eh, probably, but consulting a lawyer just to plug in a joke whike making news video is hardcore excessive

  • @Kellegram
    @Kellegram 12 дней назад +451

    Using an adblocker is ethical, the state of the internet nowadays with ads is what's unethical. The web is close to unusable.

    • @Shocker99
      @Shocker99 12 дней назад +49

      I think he used the wrong term. I think he means that he doesn't want to be a hypocrite.
      He can't complain about not getting ad revenue, if he used an ad blocker in the video.
      I imagine that he uses an ad blocker 100% of the time when he's not recording it

    • @thatoneannoyingtornadosire8755
      @thatoneannoyingtornadosire8755 12 дней назад +14

      @@Shocker99 makes sense. i do feel like he personally should have made it clear that not using an adblocker can be dangerous considering 80% of ads are downright scams or just malware

    • @Kellegram
      @Kellegram 12 дней назад +6

      @@Shocker99 I assumed he felt like it was hypocritical and frankly the response is similar. The % of ads that aren't bullshit or straight up dangerous that get blocked, or trackers invading our privacy and abusing our data, gonna be pretty small. Adblockers are fair game.

    • @2beJT
      @2beJT 12 дней назад +1

      who pays for hosting?

    • @Kellegram
      @Kellegram 12 дней назад +11

      @@2beJT Do you mean "If you block ads, how will the website fund hosting?" Coz if so, that hasn't been a real argument for a very long time now. If the website is so unusable that you can't view it without an adblocker, I'm not gonna browse the website in the first place. Not everyone bends over and takes it, there is no excuse for ads being as intrusive as they are and websites blocking you from viewing content to the extent they do, other than greed. Websites with passable ads are a minority.

  • @The1RandomFool
    @The1RandomFool 12 дней назад +205

    Rust isn't going to do anything if you deliberately program a backdoor into your software.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 12 дней назад +2

      It was deliberate? How can you tell?

    • @martinzihlmann822
      @martinzihlmann822 12 дней назад +35

      of course it's deliberate, someone had to put that line of code there. The question is is it malicious? It could be a debugging feature that escaped into production, but you never know. secure systems are a pain to develop on, hence it makes sense to break their security when you're working on an unrelated feature, but you must be cautious that that feature never ever sees the light of day.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 12 дней назад +20

      @@martinzihlmann822 Illogical nonsense. Every line of code is deliberate - but that doesn't mean every vulnerability it causes is deliberate.

    • @dadudeme
      @dadudeme 12 дней назад +51

      ​@@eadweard.You do not have magic string that allows you to reset user passwords without authentification by accident. That does not happen.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 12 дней назад +5

      @dadudeme That's not what this vulnerability was.

  • @ovidiu_nl
    @ovidiu_nl 12 дней назад +118

    The way that magic value was blurred looks super secure. 😂

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam 10 дней назад +5

      Indeed. They wanted to "hide" the magic key. (as long as their lawyer can't read it, it's "hidden")

  • @AnttiPW
    @AnttiPW 12 дней назад +57

    Fortinet summary:
    - introduce several vulnerabilities while patching old ones
    - fix 9+ cvss vulnerability one year later
    - input sanitization is optional

    • @herauthon
      @herauthon 11 дней назад +1

      is it a true goal to have a secure VPN
      imagine a perfect secure VPN ..
      with.. or without Logs..

    • @dawidgrden2227
      @dawidgrden2227 11 дней назад +1

      Imagine not using a sanitization library in 2025, either diy or 3rd party

    • @dancom6030
      @dancom6030 8 дней назад +2

      You forgot the literal backdoor they put in

  • @FelipeV3444
    @FelipeV3444 12 дней назад +59

    You can use an ad blocker and whitelist RUclips and other pages you want to support, the internet is so unusable without one nowadays.

    • @itsTyrion
      @itsTyrion 11 дней назад

      There’s a YT extension to pit ads on mute and speed them up. Win-Win.
      Google "yt ad speedup"

    • @itsTyrion
      @itsTyrion 11 дней назад

      There’s a YT extension to put ads on mute and speed them up. Win-Win.
      Google "yt ad speedup"

    • @JediMB
      @JediMB 11 дней назад

      Yeah, I white-list trusted web comics and RUclips videos, while making sure that ads in RUclips's feed go away.

  • @Nyxar-2077
    @Nyxar-2077 12 дней назад +82

    0:19 a security researcher not using an ad blocker is diabolical

    • @fatrat92
      @fatrat92 12 дней назад +31

      @@Nyxar-2077 just using the internet without an ad blocker nowadays is an awful experience.

    • @Nyxar-2077
      @Nyxar-2077 11 дней назад +1

      ​@@fatrat92 Besides the experience, the number of ads with malware is just insane, you are not safe without an ad blocker

    •  6 дней назад +1

      It depends on point of view, installing an extension that reads ALL your websites maybe rings alarm bell.

    • @radoro
      @radoro День назад +1

      Your browser reads all your sites, what do you mean exactly?

    • @Nyxar-2077
      @Nyxar-2077 День назад

      Awful answer, try again

  • @REZSTNCE
    @REZSTNCE 12 дней назад +90

    A security expert not using an adblock is diabolical!!

    • @Shocker99
      @Shocker99 12 дней назад +5

      Assuming you take what he said at face value

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae 12 дней назад +7

      My guess would be: he has a machine for recording video content (maybe even on a separate VLAN) and that is what he does this. Other machines should not have this.

    • @Slugbunny
      @Slugbunny 11 дней назад +1

      I've noticed many content creators doing the same, probably avoids scrutiny from services/owners that prohibit blockers or something.

    • @REZSTNCE
      @REZSTNCE 11 дней назад +2

      @@autohmae That's for sure, but given the paranoia a security researcher has, he wouldn't expose his dev credentials or any page that would have his vital info to malware. Since he is showing them in his yt videos!
      If he uses his main yt account while screen sharing and still does not use adblocker then that's a different discussion altogether!!

    • @REZSTNCE
      @REZSTNCE 11 дней назад +2

      @@Slugbunny That's none of their business to scrutinize what the creator is showing/using as long as he is doing what he is paid to do!

  • @garanceadrosehn9691
    @garanceadrosehn9691 12 дней назад +62

    I used to be a low-level systems programmer on a mainframe OS, and I remember that I'd do a jobdump of all the memory of a user session for my own userid, and scan that for copies of my password anywhere in memory. Using that I'd find code which was making a temporary copy of the password and then wouldn't think to zero-out the copy once it was done with it. In some cases the problem would be due to pretty subtle oversights in the code in question.

    • @js-ss1og
      @js-ss1og 12 дней назад +2

      Dump

    • @glytchd
      @glytchd 11 дней назад +1

      Like, how many proggies would always have "Yes / No / Cancel"
      Like wtf does cancel do!! Talk about introducing unhandled exceptions lol. For like 5 years sooo many programs like that...
      Its like GUYS, it's not that hard to define this behavior even when choosing in VB! Literally the field option is RIGHT THERE lol

    • @DRakeTRofKBam
      @DRakeTRofKBam 11 дней назад +11

      Thats a smart way to check for vulnerabilities actually.

    • @nothingnothing1799
      @nothingnothing1799 7 дней назад +2

      @@DRakeTRofKBam its clever but doesn't take into account base64 or md5 encoded passwords which would be just as big a problem

  • @kalfeher
    @kalfeher 12 дней назад +27

    Firewall owners don't upgrade or upgrade very slowly because they have learned over time that upgrades can be disruptive and sometimes even destructive. Everyone always puckers up when they do the upgrade.
    FW companies have gotten away with creating systems that no one really trusts to work properly if there is even the slightest change to a working config.
    Yes owners need to take responsibility too. But really the ownership experience of any major firewall product is awful.

    • @Baulder13
      @Baulder13 11 дней назад +12

      Well yeah Its the single point of failure. We've been burned by Fortinet in the past with a bad update. Especially if you don't have HA or a secondary WAN in that office. Sucks to see a firewall halfway across the country brick itself during an update and have to talk Steve into learning how a serial cable works and connecting to his phones hot spot.. Been there, done that. It blows.

  • @MikePerreman
    @MikePerreman 10 дней назад +17

    In the modern internet era, an adblocker is probably the most important part of your antivirus package.

  • @DasIllu
    @DasIllu 11 дней назад +23

    As for adblocking: look at it from an environmental perspective.
    All you wanted is let's say some text, maybe 10kb of information. You get flashy animations and videos that are increasing your power draw, need power and infrastructure to be delivered and in the end makes people rich who cheer at "Drill! Drill! Drill!"
    If anything, then the recent years only reinforced my believe that using an adblocker is mandatory now.

    • @Xathian
      @Xathian 10 дней назад

      This is probably the worst attempt at moralizing ad blocking I have ever seen lmao, attached to superfluous video content online. Did you watch this in 240p to minimize your CPU/GPU demands? After all, you only need the audio to really get the full story here, hypocrite. You want to not see ads, just admit it. You zoomers are so afraid to just admit what you want. "I pirate things because uhh... Netflix donated to Trump". Just say you want free shit, coward

  • @DezFutak
    @DezFutak 12 дней назад +11

    Keep 'em coming - you're probably the ONLY RUclipsr who's able to "sanitize" very obscure exploits so they're understandable & entertainingly explained!

  • @whistl034
    @whistl034 12 дней назад +15

    There was an awesome actor in the old TV series Law & Order who often used the line "Don't worry, we're authorized" to convince people to reveal privileged info. That's what this backdoor sounds like to me, just a header saying "trust me bro"

  • @ray73864
    @ray73864 12 дней назад +20

    You can't SSH into my Cisco router externally, it's disabled from that. You have to VPN into my network before you can SSH into the router. If businesses are exposing firewalls and routers SSH to the external world, they are doing it wrong!

    • @glytchd
      @glytchd 11 дней назад

      Absolutely. I miss the era of the Iron Geek. Freezing sun phones destroyed the information age. We've been in the dark age of Information since about 2016. Now we enter the next phase.. this 3rd global information war is... above my pay grade lol

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam 10 дней назад

      If you think ACLs are protecting you... they aren't. There have been issues with IOS services being accessible _even with_ ACLs that should've blocked them. It's stupid, but the ACL check is not the first that happens to a received packet.

    • @ray73864
      @ray73864 9 дней назад

      @@jfbeam No ACLs. Port 22 is not forwarded at all, the only forwarded port my router has is the Wireguard port.
      Sure I could still get hacked, that's always a possibility, but there are far easier targets out there.

    • @dan-nutu
      @dan-nutu 9 дней назад

      ​@@ray73864Genuinely interested to hear your opinion here: why do you trust exposing the wireguard port but not the ssh one? Code base size?

    • @ray73864
      @ray73864 9 дней назад +2

      @@dan-nutu I used to have the SSH port exposed, whenever I checked the routers logfiles, I would see daily attempts to hack the device.
      Once I turned off external SSH access and set up wireguards VPN port (I wanted VPN access to my internal network anyway), the routers logfiles have been silent for years now.
      If I need to access my router, I can just VPN into my network and then access my router that way.
      The idea is to reduce your level of exposure as much as possible while still being able to do the things you want or need to do while away.

  • @mtechson
    @mtechson 12 дней назад +27

    "Added a backdoor to the code. Team says it's not a bug-it's a feature."🤣

    • @labonnelambda58
      @labonnelambda58 9 дней назад

      As a user, we can see this as a bug because it is not what we want. But it is clearly a feature of the company : a magic access to everyone.

    • @labonnelambda58
      @labonnelambda58 9 дней назад

      It's a feature because it has been made to be used.
      The issue is that people who know it can use it, and now we all know.

  • @rooki311
    @rooki311 12 дней назад +53

    Its ethical to use adblocker especially as someone who works in the cybersecurity area. First rule: Have adblock enabled and enforced. As almost 90% of ads ( served by google ) is literaly best case a scam worst case malware.

    • @js-ss1og
      @js-ss1og 12 дней назад

      But it block securiti to.

    • @Brahvim
      @Brahvim 11 дней назад

      @@js-ss1og !??!?!?!??!?!?!??!?!

    • @asdfghyter
      @asdfghyter 11 дней назад

      @@js-ss1og it blocks what? adblockers do increase your security, both directly by blocking known malicious scripts and indirectly by not exposing you to scam ads

    • @rooki311
      @rooki311 9 дней назад

      @@js-ss1og since when? When the security executes from a third party domain yeah i guess, but what "security" does it, as everyone knows third party domains are untrustworthy.
      It blocks literally only bad things.
      Not just ads but porn too.

  • @HappyLemon-e7x
    @HappyLemon-e7x 12 дней назад +8

    i can barely write a line of C but you breaking down the vulnerabilities is the coolest thing ever

  • @JT-CO
    @JT-CO 12 дней назад +7

    2:39 "Insecurity Architecture" - sounds about right...

  • @EvilNeonETC
    @EvilNeonETC 12 дней назад +15

    Calling adblockers unethical is like taking a ride in the clown car

    • @merlin9702
      @merlin9702 11 дней назад +2

      He said it's unethical for him because he makes an income based on ads. Not that their usage is unethical in general :)

    • @zdspider6778
      @zdspider6778 9 дней назад

      ...which would be fine if you were a clown yourself.
      He said his income is based on ads. He's a clown, he's allowed to ride in the clown car.

  • @UNgineering
    @UNgineering 12 дней назад +18

    I love the "rust check" in every video: would rust have caught this? 👍

  • @Aplysia
    @Aplysia 8 дней назад +2

    The ad industry will do nothing against their bottom line to help you out. If they aren't paying you to display those ads to us, don't do them any favors.

  • @fellipec
    @fellipec 12 дней назад +17

    Backdoors like that magic code should be a crime!

    • @iuse9646
      @iuse9646 12 дней назад +1

      The fuck, are you even speaking English?

    • @labonnelambda58
      @labonnelambda58 9 дней назад +1

      Yes.
      There are backdoors which are bad because it give undesired access to people who have placed it.
      There are bad backdoors which can be hacked to give undesired undesired access.
      And there are really bad backdoors like this one that give undesired access to everyone by just vaguely looking at the code.

  • @scruples671
    @scruples671 11 дней назад +13

    It is unethical means we signed up for the commercialization of the internet. We did not sign up for that. There was no plan to do that. It was forced without any rules. The majority said no.

  • @floppytwist
    @floppytwist 11 дней назад +5

    Disabling addblockers is the worst advice ever. Chances are high you get fucked by malicious ads while browsing porn or even harmless appearing sites. RUclipsrs will always be begging for money, but instead of supporting shittified RUclips, he could insert his own affiliate links or ad segments. This guy is working as a pen tester if I am correct, which is one of the highest paid IT section. So no reason to beg around for data donations.

  • @FreeFireFull
    @FreeFireFull 12 дней назад +5

    I find it funny that the magic backdoor's password has been pixelated by Orange Tsai, but not sufficiently to actually prevent anyone from reading what it is. Makes me wonder if that was intentional.. Just a reminder that the only secure way to hide text is to completely block it out, without any stray pixels remaining.

  • @IT10T
    @IT10T 11 дней назад +6

    I do not believe that this guy doesn't use an ad blocker

  • @KL4B
    @KL4B 12 дней назад +69

    I read that as fortnite lol

    • @Jiskster
      @Jiskster 12 дней назад +1

      @@KL4B same

    • @fellypsantos_
      @fellypsantos_ 12 дней назад +1

      most of us 😂

    • @NutScrewGamer
      @NutScrewGamer 12 дней назад +1

      It just changed!

    • @justinliu7788
      @justinliu7788 12 дней назад +1

      Fortinet lol

    • @tgj5680
      @tgj5680 11 дней назад

      It kinda was, epic store was marketed using Fortnite. These guys launched their hacking forum using fortinet

  • @jimmyjam-vc6rf
    @jimmyjam-vc6rf 12 дней назад +21

    I remember Fortinet sucked so bad I used to joke that the devs are pounding 40s while writing code.
    "Looks like 40net is down again 🥴🍺"

    • @forivall
      @forivall 12 дней назад +6

      I worked there a decade ago and, well, maybe vodka instead of 40s

    • @FrankRizzo-l4v
      @FrankRizzo-l4v 9 дней назад

      Since when? Been using them since FortiOS 3.0 - 4 different generations of hardware and countless software/firmware revisions. They've been rock solid for over 2 decades. Not one crash, ever, at multiple sites.

  • @samuelhulme8347
    @samuelhulme8347 12 дней назад +18

    3:45 - So they are just gaslighting the firewall and saying “Just trust me bro”

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam 10 дней назад +1

      That're pretty much how every company works.

  • @sirsquirrel0
    @sirsquirrel0 10 дней назад +1

    absolute madness that. when i use to work with firewalls and opened them up to the internet for management purposes, ie ssh - i only allowed ssh from permitted ranges. obviously doesn’t fix the dodgy vpn bugs, but never used a fortigate in prod. use to have juniper firewalls and they had a hardcoded password i believe as well. good content, thanks.

  • @JPEaglesandKatz
    @JPEaglesandKatz 12 дней назад +13

    So waht you are saying Fortinet is just like... uhm... TP-Link....
    Gotcha.... ... It is absolutely unforgivable for any company offering security solutions to not take something like attacks and CVE's serious.... Loil.. and they offer firewalls? omg

    • @iuse9646
      @iuse9646 12 дней назад +5

      Don't forget about Cisco

    • @labonnelambda58
      @labonnelambda58 9 дней назад

      Usually, 1, 2 or 3 CVE is not enough to deserve to be on a blacklist because everyone can do mistakes. But this "magic backdoor" is enough ! Goodbye Fortinet.

  • @Zooiest
    @Zooiest 11 дней назад +4

    A security professional not using ad blockers is diabolical

    • @dirtdart81
      @dirtdart81 8 дней назад

      @Zooiest just don't click them, ez

  • @nomore6167
    @nomore6167 10 дней назад +2

    "Use it if you want to. I can't say if you should or shouldn't." - Yes, Ed, this is one case in which you absolutely CAN say people should NOT use their products. Any company which intentionally puts an easily-exploitable backdoor in its products, especially one which allows passwords to be rewritten for any user, is a company whose products should NOT be used.

  • @SpeakertoLampposts
    @SpeakertoLampposts 12 дней назад +6

    Security vulnerability due to spoofable in-band signaling? Who'd think of something like that? [Dusts off 2600Hz Cap'n Crunch whistle...]

    • @mattrogers6646
      @mattrogers6646 11 дней назад +2

      Phreaking was so much fun in the pre-mobile pay phone days. Blue boxes, red boxes, beige boxes, never got my green box working.

    • @foobarf8766
      @foobarf8766 11 дней назад +1

      Yeah but they that fixed by changing the tone to 2400+2800 hz, like no one could solder some transistors together and make multi-frequency tones, or run software on a PC with a speaker.

  • @mikegonzales8520
    @mikegonzales8520 8 дней назад

    As someone whos been a developer since the early 2000s, this is 90s level shenanigans, maybe something you might find in the jargon files lore somewhere.

  • @trichomaxxx
    @trichomaxxx 8 дней назад

    I've used their Linux VPN client, I'm not surprised at all at their incompetence. What I was most surprised is that so many people buy their stuff.

  • @holobolo1661
    @holobolo1661 12 дней назад +15

    You're allowed to use an adblocker dude.
    If we lived in a properly functioning society where people were paid a decent wage then they'd be able to pay you for content, and ads wouldn't be needed.
    Excessive advertising is a symptom of an out of control capitalist society. There's zero reason to put up with it globally. Allow list those who you think are worthy.

    • @EpicNicks
      @EpicNicks 11 дней назад +4

      To be fair, most people demonstrate they would rather give away personal data than pay even a small subscription or fixed price for digital goods and services.
      Even when the economy was doing pretty well.

    • @glytchd
      @glytchd 11 дней назад +1

      Dude your drinking the kool aid. You've been brainwashed into blaming capitalism when this is literally how things like the Soviet Union worked. STATE MONOPOLIES. Information warfare and blaming capitalism for monopolies and state controlled media. Keep pretending it's capitalism while ignoring the loss of your freedoms of travel and right to own your own labor. as you march yourself into the gulag comrade!
      Gg kid

    • @ericgoodman3510
      @ericgoodman3510 10 дней назад +1

      @@EpicNicks I'd wager most people don't fully understand what they are actually giving away by even the tiniest margin.

  • @bigrigbutters187
    @bigrigbutters187 11 дней назад

    Banger. Glad I found your channel. I just texted all the people I know who ran Fortinet in the past.

  • @dylanray5127
    @dylanray5127 12 дней назад +7

    Hey, really enjoyed your videos so far as a novice learning this stuff, but I found your comment that it's unethical to use ad blockers a little silly. Me personally, I think virtually the entire PR industry is unethical and refusing to participate, if you are able to find a different line of income, would be the right thing to do. I know that people have to make a living, but I personally wouldn't be caught dead taking money from the advertising industry, which routinely manipulates people's buying habits, voting habits, and ideologies at the behest of their corporate sponsors, and is basically responsible for funding all the misinformation that we suffer with today. Anyway the contents awesome, just thought I'd share my two sense on this.

    • @dylanray5127
      @dylanray5127 12 дней назад +2

      A free press is one that operates from user donations and sales of subscriptions only, not from advertising dollars.

  • @TheGeemili
    @TheGeemili 9 дней назад

    I do have a quibnle with the "rust wouldn't fix this" on snprintf: while memory safety wouldn't do anything a rust program would likely use a different function that makes you actually handle the error case, unlike c. Although the same could be said for many programming languages, include my favorite at the moment Zig.

  • @robgreene3956
    @robgreene3956 3 дня назад

    During development, we sometimes need backdoors to see what our system is doing during testing. I think that is what this is. They forgot to remove the back door. I once had to put a back door into a production system because I was responsible for fixing problems in the production system but was not authorized to access the production system. I did it in such a way that no one could have even read the code and figured out what I did. Adding the obvious 'magic' word indicates this was not a planned corporate backdoor. BTW: today if I was told to fix a problem, I would say "No access, can't fix". But I was young and stupid at the beginning of my career. If they told me to do something, I would find a way to do it.

  • @dropyourself
    @dropyourself 11 дней назад +5

    I liked this video but not using ad blockers for ethical reasons is like running an email newsletter and not blocking spam for ethical reasons.

  • @jtd8719
    @jtd8719 9 дней назад

    While I am not in IT, I've been interested in computers for decades. I find your videos entertaining, mildly educational and - I hope VERY occasionally - potentially life-saving. I did update all instances of 7-zip on my PCs based on your recent content.

  • @fasthowto
    @fasthowto 7 дней назад

    Same reason I don't use an ad blocker. You're a good man!

  • @scene2much
    @scene2much 11 дней назад +5

    These faults in a security device are inexcusable.
    If we have any respect for their abilities to design and code when comes to only one conclusion:
    These faults are intentional on the part of some or one employee.

  • @debugin1227
    @debugin1227 11 дней назад +2

    You think these hardware vendors would have woken up to back doors by now…breaches been going on for decades

  • @arithex
    @arithex 11 дней назад +5

    "2009 behavior"? maybe I'm just old or naive, but it was not ok to build a magic backdoor to takeover an arbitrary user account in 2009.. or 1999.. or 1989. maybe 1979? idk

  • @Fuxy22
    @Fuxy22 11 дней назад +2

    Good luck my friend, i tried going without add blockers once and was shocked how bad add placement, frequency and quality has gotten.
    It actively kills my phone battery faster when i have add block disabled...

    • @coom07
      @coom07 9 дней назад

      For your own sanity. I highly advise you and everyone outthere browsing the internet. Do not disable your ad blocker

  • @nagi603
    @nagi603 12 дней назад +3

    11:20 Instead of password, what you should change is the firewall itself. :D

  • @JorgeLopez-qj8pu
    @JorgeLopez-qj8pu 12 дней назад +18

    Content reviewers should use adblock as their job is to the article not the ads. Lots of big business remove ads from the public objects/places they use like picture taken, subway stations, park benches and times-square.

  • @yachalupson
    @yachalupson 11 дней назад

    These episodes vibe like TLDR Darknet Diaries ep's, with practical insights. Appreciate them

  • @RamuneSky
    @RamuneSky 12 дней назад +40

    ffs even the FBI recommends using an adblocker due to how "dangerous" ads have gotten over the years
    it's unethical to protect yourself from ads? that's a bunch of bullcrap, and disappointing to hear from a security researcher like you.

    • @tachywubdub2469
      @tachywubdub2469 12 дней назад +3

      I think he was talking personally, b/c he would consider himself a hippocrite since he makes revenue from ads

    • @glytchd
      @glytchd 11 дней назад +1

      ​@@tachywubdub2469 yeah I think folks are being a little time deaf. Although he should have probably have been more clear about the nuance

    • @ericgoodman3510
      @ericgoodman3510 10 дней назад +1

      @@glytchd I think everyone got the nuance just fine. I understand his postion but still think he's wrong because of all the issues ads have had over the last 15-20 years.

  • @dhay3982
    @dhay3982 12 дней назад

    I love these CVE breakdowns. It's very interesting and important as a developer to know more ways that software might have vulnerabilities

  • @jsalsman
    @jsalsman 11 дней назад +4

    Love the Would-Rust-Have-Prevented-This feature.

  • @Patterner
    @Patterner 12 дней назад +8

    maybe they should've asked someone who works in security.

  • @naeemulhoque1777
    @naeemulhoque1777 11 дней назад

    These CVE breakdowns are awesome! i love it!

  • @semajnitram
    @semajnitram 11 дней назад

    Love the CVE breakdowns, favourite videos!

  • @lujoconnor
    @lujoconnor 10 дней назад +1

    Would love to hear from a lawyer about whether this kind of back door could be used as basis of a lawsuit.

  • @nathantron
    @nathantron 11 дней назад +2

    I use an ad layer. It loads all the ads on a separate page(emulated page) that I don't see, and blocks them on the front end where we see the page and content. It's great. They get their greedy fingers on fake user data and "views", and I am left alone. :)

  • @jonnyphenomenon
    @jonnyphenomenon 12 дней назад +3

    this is a 2 year old well known CVE. Its insane this stuff is still unpatched...

    • @nordicbastard2328
      @nordicbastard2328 11 дней назад +1

      The video is completely off base, both CVE's discussed were fixed by Fortigate in a timely fashion years ago -- the "hacked" data is from firewalls that were badly configured and never updated to any newer firmware releases that were fixed. If you don't know how to properly set up a firewall, and you never update the firmware, whose fault is it when you get hacked?

  • @JeremyAndersonBoise
    @JeremyAndersonBoise 12 дней назад +7

    3:45 they are using the “trust me bro” protocol.

  • @SunsetGraffiti
    @SunsetGraffiti 10 дней назад

    Definitely enjoy the CVE breakdowns, and I respect your integrity about the whole adblock issue. Stay classy, lolev~

  • @ITheTree1
    @ITheTree1 6 дней назад

    Thank you for saying abbreviations with their meanings, very helpful for understanding as a beginner!

  • @mudi2000a
    @mudi2000a 8 дней назад +1

    Adblock is an essential security component. It’s worth more than any so called anti virus tools. But don’t worry, I watch most videos on my phone or iPad with the RUclips app so you still get your ad money 😂

  • @fabriai
    @fabriai 9 дней назад

    I really enjoy the intrusion breakdowns

  • @TheRatsintheWalls
    @TheRatsintheWalls 11 дней назад

    Content like this is why I subscribed.

  • @et4493
    @et4493 11 дней назад +1

    10:04 dude that was HILARIOUS

  • @maclayyc
    @maclayyc 11 дней назад +2

    Even after these EMBARRASSING vulnerabilities, you still need buy a subscription to access security updates.... What should I tell my customers? Don't touch Fortinet with a 10 foot pole!

  • @joshjones5172
    @joshjones5172 7 дней назад +1

    From a security perspective, you out of everyone should know using adblockers is smart and actually recommend even by the government. Obviously your feelings about them are valid, but that is what the whitelist is for.

  • @melonscratcher
    @melonscratcher 9 дней назад

    Hey Low Level, Love your videos (recently sub'd) - Real scary to see how these can be discovered by skilled researchers like yourself, but the fact that the 'magic' backdoor exists is truly wild. How much funding from Intelligence agencies do these tech companies really get for R&D OR intentinally placed ;-). Keep the content flowing Bro 😁😁😁

  • @JeffreyGroves
    @JeffreyGroves 12 дней назад

    Great video. I appreciate these kijnds of videos where you provide a quick breakdown of the issue. You're characterization of the issues is also appreciated.

  • @tvuser9529
    @tvuser9529 11 дней назад

    [guy with moustache and long hair producing a sparkly rainbow] "Its... Magic!"

  • @TimidAmoeba88
    @TimidAmoeba88 12 дней назад +1

    This was s rad video. Happy to have found your channel!

  • @jajsdja
    @jajsdja 11 дней назад +2

    I'd rather not be tracked online 24/7 so I use an ad blocker. But I don't make money from ads

  • @Hellbending
    @Hellbending 7 дней назад

    “chore: add NSA required backdoor to login”
    Lmao 🤣🤣🤣

  • @chenseanxy
    @chenseanxy 12 дней назад +1

    CMDB stands for configuration management database, not command buffer. These usually contain information about all equipments in the system and their configurations

  • @DeadlyDragon_
    @DeadlyDragon_ 12 дней назад +2

    Re: updates to network devices. typically network devices have multiple code trains, when it comes to network infrastructure stability is king. And with all these bugs around ipv6 that can cause devices to unexpectedly reboot etc. We have to analyze the features we use in our networks and if the version we are going to has known bugs impacting those features.
    We toe the line with security and keeping the network available and it sadly isn't always as simple as just upgrade the device it'll be fineee only to find out the fix version has a bug causing a memory leak when using xyz routing protocol that you are actively using and relying on. Or hey this update breaks interoperability between another device on the network that is passing traffic.
    Network companies don't always abide by RFCs which is infuriating as a network engineer.

  • @sq3rjick
    @sq3rjick 12 дней назад +4

    It's not a 2009 coding problem. This is a 1999 coding problem. Perl in cgi, magic strings.

  • @abraxas2658
    @abraxas2658 7 дней назад

    My view on adblockers is that by using one, you (the video maker) shows the article without distraction. Your duty, from my perspective, is to shout out the article for the information and provide a link, so that viewers without adblockers can drive exponentially more ads than you would by having your adblocker off while recording.

  • @byteghost
    @byteghost 12 дней назад

    Yeah Ed I love these kinds of videos you put out, I watch them almost every time you put them out, it's nice to have someone who knows what they're talking about explaining the vulnerabilities.

  • @4bSix86f61
    @4bSix86f61 11 дней назад +3

    "making money from ads"
    _gravy analytics breach_

  • @timc3600
    @timc3600 12 дней назад +2

    cmdb is probably configuration management database, as in the ITIL term.

  • @lxn7404
    @lxn7404 10 дней назад

    The magic backdoor is gold to convince people to stop using web interfaces in the administrative plane

    • @dan-nutu
      @dan-nutu 9 дней назад

      Funny but why would this "magic" not work exactly the same with other password-based admin interfaces besides a web one?

    • @lxn7404
      @lxn7404 9 дней назад

      @dan-nutu maybe I misunderstood but isn't that password hack part of the http flow?

    • @dan-nutu
      @dan-nutu 9 дней назад

      @@lxn7404 it is, but it's not because of http, it's because of the stupid code they wrote. The same could happen with any system using password

  •  10 дней назад +7

    Blocking ads is a security feature, leaving ads on is a security risk to my computer and my family's. When ads start being reasonable and stop being a security risk, I will *consider* allowing them

  • @zoltansnarf4862
    @zoltansnarf4862 11 дней назад

    i’m actually glad you explained why you have ads because I did judge you for that. Only a tiny little bit.

  • @lvalentin91
    @lvalentin91 12 дней назад +3

    What company is even safe anymore? What network equipment do you even go with at this point?

  • @Reelix
    @Reelix 9 дней назад

    9:45 - That was some comically bad blurring!
    For those wondering, it's either `4tinet2095866` or `4tinet20958666` (Online sources say one, however it looks like 3 6's were blurred)

  • @lizardkeeper100
    @lizardkeeper100 12 дней назад +3

    every one is worried about Chinese apps having backdoors but I think every thing has a backdoor now. I have yet to see a devices/program where 20 mins of messing about won't lead to some sort of backdoor.

    • @glytchd
      @glytchd 11 дней назад

      Just wait till you realize there are actually chips in your dumb phone that's literally allowing erupt access and spying on your activity.
      It allows folks like those at the NSA to check your logs and monitor ur mic etc.
      I've been trying to tell ppl that for a decade.. nice that it's now finally in public knowledge.

  • @TomAtkinson
    @TomAtkinson 8 дней назад

    I mostly agree, a device like this - to remain legal* - should require a sticker stuck to it warning about the default vulnerable state of the factory reset code right? * under NZ's "Fair Trading Act" a device sold to a consumer as a advanced security firewall can be in breach of inaccurate labeling I reckon. But commercial sales excluded from this and Consumer Guarantees Act I think. Which is odd, because it is the BUSINESS form of usage which is most in need of full awareness of security posture of a SECURITY NET DEVICE! Perhaps contracts act. The admin GUI should also carry a banner "Warning: running insecure mode +fix"

  • @ACNieuwenhuizen
    @ACNieuwenhuizen 12 дней назад +4

    0:21 respect my Man. Thanks for superb content!!!

  • @hightidesed
    @hightidesed 8 дней назад

    reminds me of the zip vulnerability where you were able to craft a zip file with a relative path that went up levels to inject data into system files etc.

  • @drizztsgaming9515
    @drizztsgaming9515 9 дней назад

    This is crazy and working in cyber security, I know lots of companies that have this set up and probably have not updated their firmware yet.
    YIKES!!