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Venom Vulnerability allows hackers to escape from VM and hack Host Machine

CrowdStrike’s senior security researcher Jason Geffner disclosed the vulnerability in the virtual Floppy Drive Code used by many computer virtualization platforms.
 
CrowdStrike’s senior security researcher Jason Geffner disclosed the vulnerability in the virtual Floppy Drive Code used by many computer virtualization platforms.

Vulnerability VENOM, CVE-2015-3456, attacker can easily escape from the confines of virtual machine guest and exploit the code-execution access to the host. This may result in  elevated access to the host’s local network and adjacent systems.

By exploiting  the VENOM vulnerability one can get access to corporate intellectual property (IP), sensitive and personally identifiable information (PII), which will potentially affect thousands of organizations and millions of end user’s connectivity, storage, security, and privacy.

According to the researcher, the bug is in QEMU’s virtual Floppy Disk Controller (FDC), notably used in  Xen, KVM, and the native QEMU client. Whereas VMware, Microsoft Hyper-V, and Bochs hypervisors are not impacted by this vulnerability.

“The VENOM vulnerability has existed since 2004, when the virtual Floppy Disk Controller was first added to the QEMU codebase“ wrote Jason Geffner in his blog post.
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