Bug Alert: a service for alerting security and IT professionals of high-impact and 0day vulnerabilities

Overview

Bug Alert

Bug Alert is a service for alerting security and IT professionals of high-impact and 0day vulnerabilities.

Hi, I'm Matthew Sullivan, a security practitioner, and the creator of Bug Alert.

When the Log4j vulnerability was first discovered, it was reported, as most are, on Twitter. 13 hours passed between the time it was disclosed on Twitter to the time LunaSec put out their widely-shared blog post, and 5 hours passed after that before I saw it up at the top of Hacker News. By then, precious time for reacting had been completely lost; it was nearly midnight in my local timezone, and all the people I needed to mobilize were already in bed.

There is no central clearinghouse for notifying security professionals about critical security issues in widely-used software. The process for issuing security bulletins from organizations like the CISA are both welcomed and well-intentioned, but by the time a CVE identifier has been issued, or a bulletin posted, it's simply too late.

Bug Alert has exactly one goal: rapid notification for serious flaws in widely-used software. This process is conducted entirely in the open, via our project on GitHub. Email/phone/SMS notification services are (obviously) not free, but my intent is to keep this effort funded by community/industry donations, if it is ever needed.

Contributions are highly encouraged! We also need a team of volunteers from around the world who can review and rapidly merge GitHub pull requests detailing new issues, as they come in. Volunteers need to be kind, level-headed individuals who are willing to engage a diverse set of people in the security community with unwavering professionalism and no ego. If that sounds like you, open a GitHub issue letting us know!

What Are Notices & Contributing Your Knowledge

Notices are the lifeblood of this service; they are the text that will explain to the community what they need to be worrying about, and why. The merging of a new notice kicks off the automated processes for alerting subscribers by phone, SMS, and email - a potentially expensive operation (telephony services aren't cheap!) that gets only one shot. Notices will generally only be merged into this project for software in widespread use (think hundreds of thousands of installs), and only if there is a large, immediate, demonstrable risk to the systems that are running the vulnerable software.

If you want to submit a notice, simply fork this repository, follow the template in content/notices/202X-MM-DD-slug.md.template to author a new notice, and make a pull request.

0day vulnerabilities will be the most commonly-reported issue for this project, but Bug Alert's notices are not exclusive to 0days. For example, when Log4j 2.15.0 was released to address a years-old issue with prior 2.X.X versions, the security community almost immediately found a vector for denial-of-service (not worthy of a Bug Alert notice). However, a day later, once the DoS issue had already been patched by 2.16.0, researchers found that the vector for DoS in 2.15.0 could also be used for remote code execution. Such a finding would be worthy of a Bug Alert notice, because 2.15.0 was likely to be in widespread use at the time the new vector for RCE was found.

Notices are required to have several fields, the most important of which are Summary, Category, and Tags. Always use the template found at content/notices/202X-MM-DD-slug.md.template to craft a notice, and refer to this README for what acceptable values for summary, category, and tags should be.

Assigning Severity

Severity levels are 'High', 'Very High', and 'Critical'. Make a best effort based on the criteria below, but please be aware that project maintainers may raise or lower your proposed severity based on their own knowledge, experience, and understanding. A new Bug Alert notice may quite literally wake someone up out of bed; our goal should be to only do that when it is truly necessary and appropriate.

High Severity

The high severity level is to be used for vulnerabilities that are extremely damaging, but only in configurations that are found less often in real-world environments, or have other migitating factors. These issues need attention, but nobody is working overnight or during the weekend to patch systems.

Example: A flaw in Adobe Reader for Windows can be utilized to install malware on a single user's system, simply by opening a malicious PDF file.

Very High Severity

The very high severity level is to be used for vulnerabilities that introduce remote code execution, privilege escalation, information disclosure/leakage, etc, where the impact may be high, but other mitigating factors are present (necessary insider knowledge required for exploit, chaining of vulnerabilities is required for successful exploit, etc). These issues need prompt attention and may require an unexpected evening maintenence window, but you can probably keep your date night plans.

Example: A flaw in Microsoft Active Directory allows any authenticated domain user on the local network to escalate their role to Domain Administrator.

Critical Severity

The critical severity level is reserved for vulnerabilities that introduce remote code execution, privilege escalation, information disclosure/leakage, and similar issues which, if exploited, will lead to massive reputational and financial damage; the types of vulnerabilities that make national news. These issues need immediate attention, and you'll be working nights and weekends until you are certain you've got everything patched up.

Example: A flaw in Django, a widely-used Python webapp framework, allows an unauthenticated attacker to run arbitrary commands on the server via the Internet and retrieve the results of those commands.

None of Those Seem To Fit?

If the issue you want to report doesn't fit the descriptions above, it may be that the issue is not of high enough impact to be served by this project. We appreciate that you took the time to consider reporting the issue to a wider audience, and will encourage you to share your knowledge on social media such as Twitter or Reddit's security-focused subreddits.

Types of vulnerabilities generally outside the scope of Bug Alert's focus are described below. Use your judgement though, and don't hestitate to submit a notice if you are confident the wider security and IT communities need to know immediately about an issue.

For example, while DoS vulnerabilities are generally out of scope, an attack that could crash-loop an nginx server in one packet would still be worthy of a notice.

Issues generally outside the scope of this project include:

  • Software not in widespread use
  • Denial of service
  • Protocol attacks (e.g. TLS cipher downgrade)
  • Attacks requiring local network access (e.g. Microsoft SMB RCEs)
  • Attacks heavily relying on user interaction (e.g. user must be tricked into downloading an executable)

Summary

Summary is the text which will be shared in notifications sent out to all subscribers. It is the most critical piece of information, and accuracy and clarity is key. For subscribers who opt to recieve phone calls, the summary will be converted to spoken word through Google's Text-to-Speech engine.

Tags

Tags should make it easy for someone to browse the bugalert.org site and find previous issues related to a specific component. Tags are a comma-separated list that should include the name of the component, the framework or runtime (if applicable), and the severity rating.

For example, a critical issue impacting the popular Java library 'Jackson Databind' should include the tags jackson-databind, Java, and Critical Severity.

Category

Category is used to segment which notices subscribers would like to receive. There are four options, and notice authors must only pick one:

Software Frameworks, Libraries, and Components

Most commonly used for open-source components.

Examples: Django, Flask, Rails, Angular, Spring Boot.

Operating Systems

For operating systems, in desktop, server, and mobile flavors.

Examples: Windows SMB, Linux Kernel, iMessage, Apple Darwin.

Services & System Applications

For services not written by the operating system vendor, core components, and language runtimes. This category can also include components primarily indended for end-users, but that are rarely installed by the average non-administrative user of a system.

Examples: openssh, Apache HTTP Server, nodejs, nginx, Java Runtime, vim, curl, Python.

End-User Applications

Applications that your average non-technical user uses regularly, often without updating, unless an automatic updating mechanism is built into the application.

Examples: Firefox, Chrome, Thunderbird, Outlook, Adobe Acrobat Reader, Spotify, Audacity, VLC, Steam, Microsoft Office.

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome and encouraged.

Run Locally

Clone this repo and cd into it: g[email protected]:BugAlertDotOrg/bugalert.git && cd bugalert

Clone the bugalert-pelican repo in as well: [email protected]:BugAlertDotOrg/bugalert-pelican.git

In a Python 3.6+ environment, install all project requirements: pip install -Ur bugalert-pelican/requirements.txt

After that, you can run a local instance with: rm -rf output && pelican --autoreload --listen -s bugalert-pelican/pelicanconf.py

Owner
BugAlert.org
BugAlert.org
2022-bridge - Example code belonging to the Bridge pattern video

Let's Take The Bridge Pattern To The Next Level This video covers how the bridge

11 Jun 14, 2022
This is a Crypto asset tracker that I built to aid my personal journey in cryptocurrencies.

Wallet Tracker This is a Crypto asset tracker that I built to aid my personal journey in cryptocurrencies. build docker build -t wallet-tracker . run

2 Mar 21, 2022
GitGuardian Shield: protect your secrets with GitGuardian

Detect secret in source code, scan your repo for leaks. Find secrets with GitGuardian and prevent leaked credentials. GitGuardian is an automated secrets detection & remediation service.

GitGuardian 1.2k Dec 27, 2022
Cobalt Strike Beacon configuration extractor and parser.

Cobalt Strike Configuration Extractor and Parser Overview Pure Python library and set of scripts to extract and parse configurations (configs) from Co

Stroz Friedberg 102 Dec 18, 2022
这次是可可萝病毒!

可可萝病毒! 事情是这样的,我又开始不干正事了。 众所周知,在Python里,0x0等于0,但是不等于可可萝。 这很不好,我们得把它改成可可萝! 效果 一般的Python—— Python 3.8.0 (tags/v3.8.0:fa919fd, Oct 14 2019, 19:37:50) [MSC

黄巍 29 Jul 14, 2022
MSDorkDump is a Google Dork File Finder that queries a specified domain name and variety of file extensions

MSDorkDump is a Google Dork File Finder that queries a specified domain name and variety of file extensions (pdf, doc, docx, etc), and downloads them.

Joe Helle 150 Jan 03, 2023
High level cheatsheet that was designed to make checks on the OSCP more manageable

High level cheatsheet that was designed to make checks on the OSCP more manageable. This repository however could also be used for your own studying or for evaluating test systems like on HackTheBox

Jacob Scheetz 89 Jan 01, 2023
It's a simple tool for test vulnerability Apache Path Traversal

SimplesApachePathTraversal Simples Apache Path Traversal It's a simple tool for test vulnerability Apache Path Traversal https://blog.mrcl0wn.com/2021

Mr. Cl0wn - H4ck1ng C0d3r 56 Dec 27, 2022
A Python Bytecode Disassembler helping reverse engineers in dissecting Python binaries

A Python Bytecode Disassembler helping reverse engineers in dissecting Python binaries by disassembling and analyzing the compiled python byte-code(.pyc) files across all python versions (including P

neeraj 95 Dec 26, 2022
Use scrapli to retrieve security zone information from a Juniper SRX firewall

Get Security Zones with Scrapli Overview This example will show how to retrieve security zone information on Juniper's SRX firewalls. In addition to t

Calvin Remsburg 2 Jun 19, 2022
A decompilation of the Nintendo Switch version of Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker

cttt-decomp A decompilation of the Nintendo Switch version of Captain Toad: Trea

shibbs 14 Aug 17, 2022
A Burp extension adding a passive scan check to flag parameters whose name or value may indicate a possible insertion point for SSRF or LFI.

BurpParamFlagger A Burp extension adding a passive scan check to flag parameters whose name or value may indicate a possible insertion point for SSRF

Allyson O'Malley 118 Nov 07, 2022
The RDT protocol (RDT3.0,GBN,SR) implementation and performance evaluation code using socket

소켓을 이용한 RDT protocols (RDT3.0,GBN,SR) 구현 및 성능 평가 코드 입니다. 코드를 실행할때 리시버를 먼저 실행하세요. 성능 평가 코드는 패킷 전송 과정을 제외하고 시간당 전송률을 출력합니다. RDT3.0 GBN SR(버그 발견으로 구현중 입니

kimtaeyong98 0 Dec 20, 2021
GitHub Advance Security Compliance Action

advanced-security-compliance This Action was designed to allow users to configure their Risk threshold for security issues reported by GitHub Code Sca

Mathew Payne 121 Dec 14, 2022
OpenSource Poc && Vulnerable-Target Storage Box.

reapoc OpenSource Poc && Vulnerable-Target Storage Box. We are aming to collect different normalized poc and the vulerable target to verify it. Now re

cckuailong 560 Dec 23, 2022
Laravel RCE (CVE-2021-3129)

CVE-2021-3129 - Laravel RCE About The script has been made for exploiting the Laravel RCE (CVE-2021-3129) vulnerability. This script allows you to wri

Joshua van der Poll 21 Dec 27, 2022
Unauthenticated Sqlinjection that leads to dump data base but this one impersonated Admin and drops a interactive shell

Unauthenticated Sqlinjection that leads to dump database but this one impersonated Admin and drops a interactive shell

sam 16 Nov 09, 2022
Dome - Subdomain Enumeration Tool. Fast and reliable python script that makes active and/or passive scan to obtain subdomains and search for open ports.

DOME - A subdomain enumeration tool Check the Spanish Version Dome is a fast and reliable python script that makes active and/or passive scan to obtai

Vadi 329 Jan 01, 2023
orfipy is a tool written in python/cython to extract ORFs in an extremely and fast and flexible manner

Introduction orfipy is a tool written in python/cython to extract ORFs in an extremely and fast and flexible manner. Other popular ORF searching tools

Urminder Singh 34 Nov 21, 2022
ThePhish: an automated phishing email analysis tool

ThePhish ThePhish is an automated phishing email analysis tool based on TheHive, Cortex and MISP. It is a web application written in Python 3 and base

675 Jan 03, 2023