Top DNS service may be suffering from some serious security flaws
An Israeli cybersecurity firm has discovered some serious security flaws affecting a piece of popular Domain Name System (DNS) software. Jerusalem-based JSOF has disclosed seven vulnerabilities affecting dnsmasq, an open-source DNS forwarding program, that the firm has collectively called DNSpooq.
“The Dnspooq vulnerabilities include DNS cache poisoning vulnerabilities as well as a potential remote code execution and others,” the JSOF report read. “The list of devices using dnsmasq is long and varied. According to our internet-based research, prominent users of dnsmasq seem to include Cisco routers, Android phones, Aruba devices, Technicolor, and Red-Hat, as well as Siemens, Ubiquiti networks, Comcast, and others.”
According to JSOF, the security flaws can be used to implement DNS cache poisoning, remote code execution, and denial-of-service attacks against a huge number of affected devices.