Apple's Safari to fall first in hacking contest ... again
Pwn2Own organizer predicts Safari will go under first, but potential 'three-peat' researcher not so sure
Gregg Keizer computerworld.com February 17, 2010 (Computerworld) Apple's Safari will be the first browser to fall next month at the Pwn2Own hacking challenge, the contest organizer predicted today.
A researcher who has won at Pwn2Own the last two years wasn't so sure.
"Safari will be the first to go," said Aaron Portnoy, security research team lead with 3Com TippingPoint, the sponsor of Pwn2Own. Portnoy is the organizer of the contest. "[Safari will] be on Snow Leopard, which isn't on the same level as Windows 7," he added as he predicted Apple's browser would crumble when the action starts March 24.
Now in its fourth year, Pwn2Own has made headlines for hacks of Apple's Mac OS X and Safari, as well as Microsoft's Windows and that company's Internet Explorer (IE) browser. In 2009, for example, researcher Charlie Miller hijacked a Mac in less than five seconds through Safari to win $5,000, while a German student knocked down three browsers on Windows to walk off with $15,000.
Miller, who works as a principal analyst at Independent Security Evaluators, a security consulting firm, plans to again compete at Pwn2Own and hopes to "three-peat" as a contest winner. In 2008, Miller won $10,000 by hacking a MacBook Air in under two minutes, again by exploiting a Safari bug.
But he's not as certain as Portnoy that Apple's browser will tumble first. "Unlike previous years, I'd say Safari isn't significantly easier than the browsers on Windows," Miller said today in an e-mail reply to questions about his Pwn2Own plans and predictions. "I say this because Snow Leopard finally has DEP [Data Execution Prevention]. Also, because at Black Hat DC, Dion Blazakis showed how to defeat DEP in [Windows] browsers. The only difference is that Safari has a bigger attack surface, and includes, for example a PDF reader (Preview) and Flash."
Miller's bottom line? "I'll predict that two to three browsers will go down, including Safari for the fourth straight year," he said.
Last year, Firefox, IE and Safari all fell to attack; only Google's Chrome went unscathed... |