7 matches found
openssl: Divide-and-conquer session key recovery in SSLv2
It was discovered that the SSLv2 servers using OpenSSL accepted SSLv2 connection handshakes that indicated non-zero clear key length for non-export cipher suites. An attacker could use this flaw to decrypt recorded SSLv2 sessions with the server by using it as a decryption oracle...
openssl: Divide-and-conquer session key recovery in SSLv2
It was discovered that the SSLv2 servers using OpenSSL accepted SSLv2 connection handshakes that indicated non-zero clear key length for non-export cipher suites. An attacker could use this flaw to decrypt recorded SSLv2 sessions with the server by using it as a decryption oracle...
JDK: ephemeral RSA keys accepted for non-export SSL/TLS cipher suites (FREAK)
GSKit in IBM Tivoli Directory Server ITDS 6.0 before 6.0.0.73-ISS-ITDS-IF0073, 6.1 before 6.1.0.66-ISS-ITDS-IF0066, 6.2 before 6.2.0.42-ISS-ITDS-IF0042, and 6.3 before 6.3.0.35-ISS-ITDS-IF0035 and IBM Security Directory Server ISDS 6.3.1 before 6.3.1.9-ISS-ISDS-IF0009 does not properly restrict T...
JDK: ephemeral RSA keys accepted for non-export SSL/TLS cipher suites (FREAK)
GSKit in IBM Tivoli Directory Server ITDS 6.0 before 6.0.0.73-ISS-ITDS-IF0073, 6.1 before 6.1.0.66-ISS-ITDS-IF0066, 6.2 before 6.2.0.42-ISS-ITDS-IF0042, and 6.3 before 6.3.0.35-ISS-ITDS-IF0035 and IBM Security Directory Server ISDS 6.3.1 before 6.3.1.9-ISS-ISDS-IF0009 does not properly restrict T...
openssl: only allow ephemeral RSA keys in export ciphersuites (FREAK)
It was discovered that OpenSSL would accept ephemeral RSA keys when using non-export RSA cipher suites. A malicious server could make a TLS/SSL client using OpenSSL use a weaker key exchange method...
openssl: Divide-and-conquer session key recovery in SSLv2
It was discovered that the SSLv2 servers using OpenSSL accepted SSLv2 connection handshakes that indicated non-zero clear key length for non-export cipher suites. An attacker could use this flaw to decrypt recorded SSLv2 sessions with the server by using it as a decryption oracle...
openssl: Divide-and-conquer session key recovery in SSLv2
It was discovered that the SSLv2 servers using OpenSSL accepted SSLv2 connection handshakes that indicated non-zero clear key length for non-export cipher suites. An attacker could use this flaw to decrypt recorded SSLv2 sessions with the server by using it as a decryption oracle...