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by q3k
123 days ago
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I'm not saying it's not important, it is. I just don't believe that '[the] majority of memory bugs are from out of bounds access'. That was maybe true 20 years ago, when an unbounded strcpy to an unprotected return pointer on the stack was super common and exploiting this kind of vulnerabilities what most vulndev was. This brings C one tiny step closer to the state of the art, which is commendable, but I don't believe codebases which start using this will reduce their published vulnerability count significantly. Making use of this requires effort and diligence, and I believe most codebases that can expend such effort already have a pretty good security track record. |
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And in terms of how easy it is to convert a memory safety issue into an exploit, it’s not meaningfully much harder. The harder pieces are when sandboxing comes into play so that for example exploiting V8 doesn’t give you arbitrary broader access if the compromised process is itself sandboxed.