Artwork for podcast It's 5:05! Daily cybersecurity and open source briefing
Episode #260: Edwin Kwan: OAuth Implementation Flaw Allowing Account Takeover; Marcel Brown: This Day in Tech History; Katy Craig: HTTP/2 RapidReset Attack; Olimpiu Pop: HTTP/2 RapidReset: Zero-day Vulnerability; Shannon Lietz: RapidReset: How Critical is It
Episode 26027th October 2023 • It's 5:05! Daily cybersecurity and open source briefing • Contributors from Around the World
00:00:00 00:16:25

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The stories we’re covering today.

Marcel Brown: October 28th, 1998. US president Bill Clinton signs into law the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, or DMCA. The law is intended to criminalize production and dissemination of technology designed to circumvent digital copyright protection, known as Digital Rights Management, or DRM.

Edwin Kwan: Security researchers discovered critical misconfiguration flaws in the implementation of the Open Authorization or OAuth standard by three popular websites. The flaw would have allowed attackers to take over user accounts and could lead to identity theft, financial fraud, access to credit cards, and other cybercriminal activity.

Katy Craig: Recently, Google services and Cloud customers found themselves in the crosshairs of a novel and formidable distributed denial of service, or DDoS, attack, peaking in August, with one assault clocking a staggering 398 million requests per second.

Olimpiu Pop: HTTP/2 was the first major revamp of the HTTP protocol in ages. It brought significant performance improvements enabled by stream multiplexing. This enables the simultaneous transmission of multiple request and response messages over a single connection without interference between streams.

Shannon Lietz: I would like to see the industry be a little bit more actionable about what's happening, because you had to parse this one out to really understand it. I came to the realization of is, if you do have companies that you work with, or vendors that you work with, and they're getting told right away, all of a sudden they have a CVE they have to go deal with, it is going to set a whole bunch of things behind.

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