In one of my penetration testing training classes, in one of the lessons, we generated a malicious PDF file that would give us a shell when the victim opened it in Adobe.
Granted, it relied on a specific bug in the JavaScript engine of Adobe Reader, so unless they're using a version that's 15 years old, it wouldn't work today, but you can't be too cautious. 0-days can always exist.
True, I just considered that once you handle a PDF with so much care like if it was poisoned, it's perhaps better to send this poison to someone else to handle.
In one of my penetration testing training classes, in one of the lessons, we generated a malicious PDF file that would give us a shell when the victim opened it in Adobe.
Granted, it relied on a specific bug in the JavaScript engine of Adobe Reader, so unless they're using a version that's 15 years old, it wouldn't work today, but you can't be too cautious. 0-days can always exist.