On 23/10/2012 16:07, Daniel Sichel wrote: > >> Hello everybody: >> environment is A is hacker client? B is target and C is Manager
>> center and C have all A and B private key. WTF! Why would anyone C or B or even A give out a PRIVATE key. Does no one RTFM - you never ever give out your private key and you protect it to heck and back. >> C are open 80,22. And this is http's 403 state on the C. >> I have A's root,how to steal private key On the C. Are there have >> some vuln with openssh. >> Is there some impossible which C login in to the A and B when A and B >> let C run some bash. > > > OK, I am a total n00b here but I do not see how having an ssl connection > would help reveal an SSH key. Our organization generates our root certs > separate from, and unrelated to SSH keys.. I do not see how SSL access in and > of itself, helps get at SSH keys, If it does, let me know, I bank at Chase > and that would be darn handy to know (believe me, they have it coming)! This is full disclosure not "help a student do his homework". My advice: give him a very blatantly stupid answer - let him get "null points" from teacher :-) Jacqui _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
