HP Security Bulletin - Potential security vulnerabilities have been identified with HP SSL for OpenVMS. The vulnerabilities could be remotely exploited resulting in unauthorized data injection or a Denial of Service (DoS).
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HP Security Bulletin - Potential security vulnerabilities have been identified with HP System Management
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Gentoo Linux Security Advisory GLSA 200904-05 - An error in the OpenSSL certificate chain validation in ntp might allow for spoofing attacks. It has been reported that ntp incorrectly checks the return value of the EVP_VerifyFinal(), a vulnerability related to CVE-2008-5077 (GLSA 200902-02). Versions less than 4.2.4_p6 are affected.
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HP Security Bulletin - A potential security vulnerability has been identified with HP-UX running OpenSSL. The vulnerability could be exploited remotely to allow an unauthorized access.
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VMware Security Advisory - ESX patches for OpenSSL, vim and bind resolve several security issues. OpenSSL 0.9.7a-33.24 and earlier does not properly check the return value from the EVP_VerifyFinal function, which could allow a remote attacker to bypass validation of the certificate chain via a malformed SSL/TLS signature for DSA and ECDSA keys. A flaw was discovered in the way Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND) checked the return value of the OpenSSL DSA_do_verify function. On systems using DNSSEC, a malicious zone could present a malformed DSA certificate and bypass proper certificate validation, allowing spoofing attacks. Various vulnerabilities were discovered in vim such as format string issues and input validation problems.
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Gentoo Linux Security Advisory GLSA 200902-02 - An error in the OpenSSL certificate chain validation might allow for spoofing attacks. The Google Security Team reported that several functions incorrectly check the result after calling the EVP_VerifyFinal() function, allowing a malformed signature to be treated as a good signature rather than as an error. This issue affects the signature checks on DSA and ECDSA keys used with SSL/TLS. Versions less than 0.9.8j are affected.
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Debian Security Advisory 1701-1 - It was discovered that OpenSSL does not properly verify DSA signatures on X.509 certificates due to an API misuse, potentially leading to the acceptance of incorrect X.509 certificates as genuine (CVE-2008-5077).
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Mandriva Linux Security Advisory 2009-001 - A vulnerability was found by the Google Security Team with how OpenSSL checked the verification of certificates. An attacker in control of a malicious server or able to effect a man-in-the-middle attack, could present a malformed SSL/TLS signature from a certificate chain to a vulnerable client, which would then bypass the certificate validation. The updated packages have been patched to prevent this issue.
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FreeBSD Security Advisory - The EVP_VerifyFinal() function from OpenSSL is used to determine if a digital signature is valid. The SSL layer in OpenSSL uses EVP_VerifyFinal(), which in several places checks the return value incorrectly and treats verification errors as a good signature. This is only a problem for DSA and ECDSA keys.
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Ubuntu Security Notice USN-704-1 - It was discovered that OpenSSL did not properly perform signature verification on DSA and ECDSA keys. If user or automated system connected to a malicious server or a remote attacker were able to perform a man-in-the-middle attack, this flaw could be exploited to view sensitive information.
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Several functions inside OpenSSL incorrectly checked the result aftercalling the EVP_VerifyFinal function, allowing a malformed signatureto be treated as a good signature rather than as an error. This issueaffected the signature checks on DSA and ECDSA keys used withSSL/TLS.One way to exploit this flaw would be for a remote attacker who is incontrol of a malicious server or who can use a 'man in the middle'attack to present a malformed SSL/TLS signature from a certificate chainto a vulnerable client, bypassing validation.
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Several functions inside the OpenSSL library incorrectly check the result after calling the EVP_VerifyFinal function. This bug allows a malformed signature to be treated as a good signature rather than as an error. This issue affects the signature checks on DSA and ECDSA keys used with SSL/TLS. The flaw may be exploited by a malicious server or a man-in-the-middle attack that presents a malformed SSL/TLS signature from a certificate chain to a vulnerable client, bypassing validation.
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