Comments
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How about you give me the CVE that will currently allow an attacker root access to a fully patched firefox, from simply watching (de-encoding) a webm. You won't be able to. My original question is "are webms vulnerable in the same way webps are". If you follow the news you'll see webp's can achieve root access from simply…
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Wow you're literally using chatGPT that was gobblegoock
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Would like to add that Flex is incorrect with his chatgpt answer, there exists no known exploit regarding decoding webms
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I don't need this chatGPT boiler plate I thought I was buying into a community of experts
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Can you link me to an article / paper / anything proving that malicious webm's can get access to a device? Or this more a vague "yeah, maybe there's a zero day for the webm file format that'll show up in the future idk"
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Thank you but have you not read the news regarding the webp vulnerability? You view a website within the last 10 years that has a malicious 1px x 1px wepb anywhere in its html and the bad guys are in. That whole "the hacker would have to first get inside" attitude has gone out the window in this era of zero days. Which is…
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Thanks, but have you not read the news? You say the attacker would "first have to get inside", that's precisely what I'm on about. Turns out there's been a zero day flaw in the webp image format, you view any website in the last 10+ years that has a 1px x 1px malicious webp and they're in. Google said this attack has been…
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I suppose my main concern is when an attacker has root access to your machine, they can arguably get around this useful feature?
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Thanks for responding...it's so annoying, you say always install software from sources you trust but I don't think think you get my frustration... looking. at. an. image. can. rat. your. pc. It's not your fault, it's just how things are. But it's absurd. "Bitdefender's firewall is one of the best on the market, and it is…