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Re: All China, All The Time

>> To: Thor (Hammer of God)
>> Cc: bugtraq@securityfocus.com
>> Subject: Re: All China, All The Time
>>
>> On 1/14/10 8:09 AM, Thor (Hammer of God) wrote:
>>> So, apparently my "witty" tag via Google Translate means something I
>> didn't quite mean.  Surprise, surprise.  Luckily it wasn't something
>> vulgar, (that's what I get for trusting Google Translate and trying to
>> be funny) but what I meant it to say was "If you can read this, don't
>> bother replying because my servers won't get it."  However, it seems to
>> mean something like "don't reply because you are not welcome here" or

RE: All China, All The Time

> >> To: Thor (Hammer of God)
> >> Cc: bugtraq@securityfocus.com
> >> Subject: Re: All China, All The Time
> >>
> >> On 1/14/10 8:09 AM, Thor (Hammer of God) wrote:
> >>> So, apparently my "witty" tag via Google Translate means something
> I
> >> didn't quite mean.  Surprise, surprise.  Luckily it wasn't something
> >> vulgar, (that's what I get for trusting Google Translate and trying
> to
> >> be funny) but what I meant it to say was "If you can read this,

Re: All China, All The Time

>>> Cc: bugtraq@securityfocus.com
>>> Subject: Re: All China, All The Time
>>>
>>> On 1/14/10 8:09 AM, Thor (Hammer of God) wrote:
>>>>
>>>> So, apparently my "witty" tag via Google Translate means something I
>>>
>>> didn't quite mean.  Surprise, surprise.  Luckily it wasn't something
>>> vulgar, (that's what I get for trusting Google Translate and trying to
>>> be funny) but what I meant it to say was "If you can read this, don't
>>> bother replying because my servers won't get it."  However, it seems to

RE: All China, All The Time

> >> To: Thor (Hammer of God)
> >> Cc: bugtraq@securityfocus.com
> >> Subject: Re: All China, All The Time
> >>
> >> On 1/14/10 8:09 AM, Thor (Hammer of God) wrote:
> >>> So, apparently my "witty" tag via Google Translate means something
> I
> >> didn't quite mean.  Surprise, surprise.  Luckily it wasn't something
> >> vulgar, (that's what I get for trusting Google Translate and trying
> to
> >> be funny) but what I meant it to say was "If you can read this,

RE: All China, All The Time

So, apparently my "witty" tag via Google Translate means something I didn't quite mean.  Surprise, surprise.  Luckily it wasn't something vulgar, (that's what I get for trusting Google Translate and trying to be funny) but what I meant it to say was "If you can read this, don't bother replying because my servers won't get it."  However, it seems to mean something like "don't reply because you are not welcome here" or similar.  That wasn't my intention, as it seems to infer I actually have something against the Chinese people and not their networks, which I take issue with.

Sorry for the poorly translated reference.

t

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Thor
> Sent: Wednesday, January 13, 2010 12:29 PM
> To: bugtraq@securityfocus.com

Vulnerabilities in plugins for WordPress

Cross-Site Request Forgery, Directory Traversal, Arbitrary File Deletion,
Denial of Service, Full path disclosure, Insufficient Authorization,
Information Leakage, Abuse of Functionality, HTTP Response Splitting, SQL
Injection and CRLF Injection vulnerabilities.

Most posts mentioned in the list are on Ukrainian (so use Google Translate),
but some of them are on English - posts from my Month of Bugs in Captchas
(MoBiC) project, which I made in 2007. Take care of your plugins for WP and
web sites which use them.

Best wishes & regards,

OneSecurityDay 2008 - Web application auditing challenge

#### Translation by Google Translate ####

This Opencosmo Security has organizato the OneSecurityDay event held each year. The event is dedicated to all the lovers of play of web application wishing to compete with other auditors from around the world.

For those who do not know, OneSecurityDay to find vulnerabilities in PHP applications / mySQL in order to violate the protections and access as an administrator.
The winner not only find his name on the flyer next year, will win a prize 300Fr .- (200 €)

To participate just send an e-mail to osd@opencosmo.com with its data combined the method of payment:
Name:
Surname:

OneSecurityDay 2008 - Web application auditing challenge

#### Translation by Google Translate ####

This Opencosmo Security has organizato the OneSecurityDay event held each year. The event is dedicated to all the lovers of play of web application wishing to compete with other auditors from around the world.

For those who do not know, OneSecurityDay to find vulnerabilities in PHP applications / mySQL in order to violate the protections and access as an administrator.
The winner not only find his name on the flyer next year, will win a prize 300Fr .- (200 €)

To participate just send an e-mail to osd@opencosmo.com with its data combined the method of payment:
Name:
Surname:

OneSecurityDay 2008 - Web application auditing challenge

#### Translation by Google Translate ####

This Opencosmo Security has organizato the OneSecurityDay event held each year. The event is dedicated to all the lovers of play of web application wishing to compete with other auditors from around the world.

For those who do not know, OneSecurityDay to find vulnerabilities in PHP applications / mySQL in order to violate the protections and access as an administrator.
The winner not only find his name on the flyer next year, will win a prize 300Fr .- (200 €)

To participate just send an e-mail to osd@opencosmo.com with its data combined the method of payment:
Name:
Surname:



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