New Full Disclosure, Website Vulnerabilities Database

The biggest news in security circles in the past day or so is the new full disclosure site, Vulnerable Sites DB database.

Gadi Evron, CEO & Founder, Cymmetria, head of Israeli CERT, Chairman, Cyber Threat Intelligence Alliance

April 16, 2010

2 Min Read
Dark Reading logo in a gray background | Dark Reading

The biggest news in security circles in the past day or so is the new full disclosure site, Vulnerable Sites DB database.Though such efforts existed before, what makes this site special is its goal to publicly display vulnerable Websites.

Thus, vulnerable Websites that an attacker would have needed to use Google and perhaps another tool to find are now sitting publicly available for all to see -- and potentially deface or even steal their databases.

In the past, I might have viewed such an effort as a black hat one, but today? Today I see it as a service to the community. On the one hand, it provides the good guys with data the bad guys would have available, without breaking the law. On the other hand, it provides these Websites a free QA service.

Most important, though, and with no apologies, it names and shames. The only reason worms used to be a big deal after a while, while botnets were not noticed, was PR. The only reason DDoS (while a serious threat) is treated as the essence of information/cyber warfare rather than espionage is good PR.

Perhaps when these Websites are named and shamed, they will fix their security vulnerabilities -- and let's be honest, most SQL injections don't really have an excuse to exist in modern Websites anymore. Plus, it may raise awareness to this beaten-to-death security issue so that others will have a business reason to take care of it before a compromise.

All in all, I am in support of this effort. Those who are not should remember this information is available to the criminals almost as easily available to the Good Guys, and this old easily solvable -- technically -- security problem, has not yet been solved. It's time to try something new and stop hiding behind outdated and pointless ethics that didn't survive the test of time with a changing landscape.

Follow Gadi Evron on Twitter: http://twitter.com/gadievron.

Gadi Evron is an independent security strategist based in Israel. Special to Dark Reading.

About the Author

Gadi Evron

CEO & Founder, Cymmetria, head of Israeli CERT, Chairman, Cyber Threat Intelligence Alliance

Gadi is CEO and founder of Cymmetria, a cyber deception startup and chairman of the Israeli CERT. Previously, he was vice president of cybersecurity strategy for Kaspersky Lab and led PwC's Cyber Security Center of Excellence, located in Israel. He is widely recognized for his work in Internet security and global incident response, and considered the first botnet expert. Gadi was CISO for the Israeli government Internet operation, founder of the Israeli Government CERT and a research fellow at Tel Aviv University, working on cyber warfare projects. Gadi authored two books on information security, organizes global professional working groups, chairs worldwide conferences, and is a frequent lecturer.

Keep up with the latest cybersecurity threats, newly discovered vulnerabilities, data breach information, and emerging trends. Delivered daily or weekly right to your email inbox.

You May Also Like


More Insights