Google, Amazon forced to patch DNS platforms after serious bug discovered

Two of the three impacted DNSaaS vendors have patched the flaws

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Cybersecurityresearchers have disclosed a security issue that affected hostedDNS service providersand can be exploited to monitor incoming traffic and map the victim’s internal networks.

At the recent Black Hat security conference, the security researchers Shir Tamari and Ami Luttwak from cloud infrastructure security company Wiz,presented their findingsas a novel class of DNS vulnerabilities that they claim have been successfully exploited on three majorcloud providers.

“In this research, we detail a specific vulnerability that is common across many major DNS service providers that leads to information leakage in connected corporate networks. Specifically, we show howMicrosoft Windowsendpoints reveal sensitive customer information when performing DNS update queries,” their presentation’s brief stated.

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Commenting on the impact of the vulnerability, the researchers note that any cloud provider, domain registrar, and website host who provides DNS-as-a-Serve (DNSaaS) is potentially vulnerable.

Easy to exploit

Easy to exploit

The researchers note that the root cause of the vulnerability lies in the non-standard implementation of DNS resolvers that, under certain conditions, can leak information from internal corporate networks.

In fact, in just a few hours of DNS sniffing, the researchers collected DNS updates from about 100,000 Windows endpoints belonging to around 15,000 businesses, including over a dozen Fortune 500 companies.

Speaking toThe Record, the researchers said that while they weren’t able to sniff on a company’s real-time DNS traffic, the dynamic DNS updates allowed them to trace all the companies who were using the same managed DNS server, and create maps of their individual internal network.

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The researchers shared that of the three DNSaaS providers they found vulnerable to this issue, two of them,AmazonandGoogle, have rolled out updates, while a third is in the process of patching the vulnerability.

ViaThe Record

With almost two decades of writing and reporting on Linux, Mayank Sharma would like everyone to think he’sTechRadar Pro’sexpert on the topic. Of course, he’s just as interested in other computing topics, particularly cybersecurity, cloud, containers, and coding.

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