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Like most BIOSes, HP 68DTT Ver. F.0D can be used to ask a password to users at boot time to implement a pre-boot authentication.
The password checking routine of Hewlett-Packard 68DTT Ver. F.0D (11/22/2005) fails to sanitize the BIOS keyboard buffer after reading user input, resulting in plain text password leakage to local users.
The BIOS's pre-boot authentication routines use the BIOS API to read user input via the keyboard. The BIOS internally copies the keystrokes in a RAM structure called the BIOS Keyboard buffer inside the BIOS Data Area. This buffer is not flushed after use, resulting in potential plain text password leakage once the OS is fully booted, assuming the attacker can read the password at physical memory location 0x40:0x1e.
Plain text password disclosure. Local access is required, but no physical access to the machine.
The level of privilege required to retrieve the password from memory is OS dependent and varies from guest user under Microsoft Windows (any) to root user under most Unix based OSes.
http://www.ivizsecurity.com/research/preboot/preboot_whitepaper.pdf
This vulnerability was discovered by Security Researcher Jonathan Brossard from iViZ Techno Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
http://www.ivizsecurity.com/security-advisory.html
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