The Pwnie Awards recognize both excellence and incompetence in the field of information security.[citation needed] Winners are selected by a committee of security industry professionals from nominations collected from the information security community. Nominees are announced yearly at Summercon, and the awards themselves are presented at the Black Hat Security Conference.[2]
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The name Pwnie Award is based on the word "pwn", which is hacker slang meaning to "compromise" or "control" based on the previous usage of the word "own" (and it is pronounced similarly). The name "The Pwnie Awards," pronounced as "Pony,"[2] is meant to sound like the Tony Awards, an awards ceremony for Broadway theater in New York City.
The Pwnie Awards were founded in 2007 by Alexander Sotirov and Dino Dai Zovi following discussions regarding Dino's discovery of a cross-platform QuickTime vulnerability (CVE-2007-2175) and Alexander's discovery of an ANI file processing vulnerability (CVE-2007-0038) in Internet Explorer.
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2023
- Best Desktop Bug: CountExposure!
- Best Cryptographic Attack: Video-based cryptanalysis: Extracting Cryptographic Keys from Video Footage of a Device’s Power LED [4] by Ben Nassi, Etay Iluz, Or Cohen, Ofek Vayner, Dudi Nassi, Boris Zadov, Yuval Elovici
- Best Song: Clickin’
- Most Innovative Research: Inside Apple’s Lightning: Jtagging the iPhone for Fuzzing and Profit
- Most Under-Hyped Research: Activation Context Cache Poisoning
- Best Privilege Escalation Bug: URB Excalibur: Slicing Through the Gordian Knot of VMware VM Escapes
- Best Remote Code Execution Bug: ClamAV RCE
- Lamest Vendor Response: Three Lessons From Threema: Analysis of a Secure Messenger
- Most Epic Fail: “Holy fucking bingle, we have the no fly list,”
- Epic Achievement: Clement Lecigne: 0-days hunter world champion
- Lifetime Achievement Award: Mudge
2022
- Lamest Vendor Response: Google's "TAG" response team for "unilaterally shutting down a counterterrorism operation."[5][6][7]
- Epic Achievement: Yuki Chen’s Windows Server-Side RCE Bugs
- Most Epic Fail: HackerOne Employee Caught Stealing Vulnerability Reports for Personal Gains
- Best Desktop Bug: Pietro Borrello, Andreas Kogler, Martin Schwarzl, Moritz Lipp, Daniel Gruss, Michael Schwarz for Architecturally Leaking Data from the Microarchitecture
- Most Innovative Research: Pietro Borrello, Martin Schwarzl, Moritz Lipp, Daniel Gruss, Michael Schwarz for Custom Processing Unit: Tracing and Patching Intel Atom Microcode
- Best Cryptographic Attack: Hertzbleed: Turning Power Side-Channel Attacks Into Remote Timing Attacks on x86 by Yingchen Wang, Riccardo Paccagnella, Elizabeth Tang He, Hovav Shacham, Christopher Fletcher, David Kohlbrenner
- Best Remote Code Execution Bug: KunlunLab for Windows RPC Runtime Remote Code Execution (CVE-2022-26809)
- Best Privilege Escalation Bug: Qidan He of Dawnslab, for Mystique in the House: The Droid Vulnerability Chain That Owns All Your Userspace
- Best Mobile Bug: FORCEDENTRY
- Most Under-Hyped Research: Yannay Livneh for Spoofing IP with IPIP
2021
- Lamest Vendor Response: Cellebrite, for their response to Moxie, the creator of Signal, reverse-engineering their UFED and accompanying software and reporting a discovered exploit.[8][9]
- Epic Achievement: Ilfak Guilfanov, in honor of IDA's 30th Anniversary.
- Best Privilege Escalation Bug: Baron Samedit of Qualys, for the discovery of a 10-year-old exploit in sudo.
- Best Song: The Ransomware Song by Forrest Brazeal[10]
- Best Server-Side Bug: Orange Tsai, for his Microsoft Exchange Server ProxyLogon attack surface discoveries.[11]
- Best Cryptographic Attack: The NSA for its disclosure of a bug in the verification of signatures in Windows which breaks the certificate trust chain.[12]
- Most Innovative Research: Enes Göktaş, Kaveh Razavi, Georgios Portokalidis, Herbert Bos, and Cristiano Giuffrida at VUSec for their research on the "BlindSide" Attack.[13]
- Most Epic Fail: Microsoft, for their failure to fix PrintNightmare.[14]
- Best Client-Side Bug: Gunnar Alendal's discovery of a buffer overflow on the Samsung Galaxy S20's secure chip.[15]
- Most Under-Hyped Research: The Qualys Research Team for 21Nails,[16] 21 vulnerabilities in Exim, the Internet's most popular mail server.[17]
2020
- Best Server-Side Bug: BraveStarr (CVE-2020-10188) – A Fedora 31 netkit telnetd remote exploit (Ronald Huizer')
- Best Privilege Escalation Bug: checkm8 – A permanent unpatchable USB bootrom exploit for a billion iOS devices. (axi0mX)
- Epic Achievement: "Remotely Rooting Modern Android Devices" (Guang Gong)
- Best Cryptographic Attack: Zerologon vulnerability (Tom Tervoort, CVE-2020-1472)
- Best Client-Side Bug: RCE on Samsung Phones via MMS (CVE-2020-8899 and -16747), a zero click remote execution attack. (Mateusz Jurczyk)
- Most Under-Hyped Research: Vulnerabilities in System Management Mode (SMM) and Trusted Execution Technology (TXT) (CVE-2019-0151 and -0152) (Gabriel Negreira Barbosa, Rodrigo Rubira Branco, Joe Cihula)
- Most Innovative Research: TRRespass: When Memory Vendors Tell You Their Chips Are Rowhammer-free, They Are Not. (Pietro Frigo, Emanuele Vannacci, Hasan Hassan, Victor van der Veen, Onur Mutlu, Cristiano Giuffrida, Herbert Bos, Kaveh Razavi)
- Most Epic Fail: Microsoft; for the implementation of Elliptic-curve signatures which allowed attackers to generate private pairs for public keys of any signer, allowing HTTPS and signed binary spoofing. (CVE-2020-0601)
- Best Song: Powertrace by Rebekka Aigner, Daniel Gruss, Manuel Weber, Moritz Lipp, Patrick Radkohl, Andreas Kogler, Maria Eichlseder, ElTonno, tunefish, Yuki and Kater
- Lamest Vendor Response: Daniel J. Bernstein (CVE-2005-1513)
2019
- Best Server-Side Bug: Orange Tsai and Meh Chang, for their SSL VPN research.[18]
- Most Innovative Research: Vectorized Emulation[19] Brandon Falk
- Best Cryptographic Attack: \m/ Dr4g0nbl00d \m/ [20] Mathy Vanhoef, Eyal Ronen
- Lamest Vendor Response: Bitfi
- Most Over-hyped Bug: Allegations of Supermicro hardware backdoors, Bloomberg
- Most Under-hyped Bug: Thrangrycat, (Jatin Kataria, Red Balloon Security)
2018
- Most Innovative Research: Spectre[21]/Meltdown[22] (Paul Kocher, Jann Horn, Anders Fogh, Daniel Genkin, Daniel Gruss, Werner Haas, Mike Hamburg, Moritz Lipp, Stefan Mangard, Thomas Prescher, Michael Schwarz, Yuval Yarom)
- Best Privilege Escalation Bug: Spectre[21]/Meltdown[22] (Paul Kocher, Jann Horn, Anders Fogh, Daniel Genkin, Daniel Gruss, Werner Haas, Mike Hamburg, Moritz Lipp, Stefan Mangard, Thomas Prescher, Michael Schwarz, Yuval Yarom)
- Lifetime Achievement: Michał Zalewski
- Best Cryptographic Attack: ROBOT - Return Of Bleichenbacher’s Oracle Threat [23] Hanno Böck, Juraj Somorovsky, Craig Young
- Lamest Vendor Response: Bitfi hardware crypto-wallet, after the "unhackable" device was hacked to extract the keys required to steal coins and rooted to play Doom.[24]
2017
- Epic Achievement: Federico Bento for Finally getting TIOCSTI ioctl attack fixed
- Most Innovative Research: ASLR on the line [25] Ben Gras, Kaveh Razavi, Erik Bosman, Herbert Bos, Cristiano Giuffrida
- Best Privilege Escalation Bug: DRAMMER [26] Victor van der Veen, Yanick Fratantonio, Martina Lindorfer, Daniel Gruss, Clementine Maurice, Giovanni Vigna, Herbert Bos, Kaveh Razavi, Cristiano Giuffrida
- Best Cryptographic Attack: The first collision for full SHA-1 Marc Stevens, Elie Bursztein, Pierre Karpman, Ange Albertini, Yarik Markov
- Lamest Vendor Response: Lennart Poettering - for mishandling security vulnerabilities most spectacularly for multiple critical Systemd bugs[27]
- Best Song: Hello (From the Other Side)[28] - Manuel Weber, Michael Schwarz, Daniel Gruss, Moritz Lipp, Rebekka Aigner
2016
- Most Innovative Research: Dedup Est Machina: Memory Deduplication as an Advanced Exploitation Vector [29] Erik Bosman, Kaveh Razavi, Herbert Bos, Cristiano Giuffrida
- Lifetime Achievement: Peiter Zatko aka Mudge
- Best Cryptographic Attack: DROWN attack[30] Nimrod Aviram et al.
- Best Song: Cyberlier[31] - Katie Moussouris
2015
Winner list from.[32]
- Best Server-Side Bug: SAP LZC LZH Compression Multiple Vulnerabilities, Martin Gallo
- Best Client–Side Bug: Will it BLEND?,[33] Mateusz j00ru Jurczyk
- Best Privilege Escalation Bug: UEFI SMM Privilege Escalation,[34] Corey Kallenberg
- Most Innovative Research: Imperfect Forward Secrecy: How Diffie-Hellman Fails in Practice [35] Adrian David et al.
- Lamest Vendor Response: Blue Coat Systems (for blocking Raphaël Rigo‘s research presentation at SyScan 2015)
- Most Overhyped Bug: Shellshock (software bug), Stephane Chazelas
- Most Epic FAIL: OPM - U.S. Office of Personnel Management (for losing data on 19.7 Million applicants for US government security clearances.)
- Most Epic 0wnage: China
- Best Song: "Clean Slate" by YTCracker
- Lifetime Achievement: Thomas Dullien aka Halvar Flake
2009
- Best Server-Side Bug: Linux SCTP FWD Chunk Memory Corruption (CVE-2009-0065) David 'DK2' Kim
- Best Privilege Escalation Bug: Linux udev Netlink Message Privilege Escalation (CVE-2009-1185) Sebastian Krahmer
- Best Client-Side Bug: msvidctl.dll MPEG2TuneRequest Stack buffer overflow (CVE-2008-0015) Ryan Smith and Alex Wheeler
- Mass 0wnage: Red Hat Networks Backdoored OpenSSH Packages (CVE-2008-3844) Anonymous
- Best Research: From 0 to 0day on Symbian Credit: Bernhard Mueller
- Lamest Vendor Response: Linux "Continually assuming that all kernel memory corruption bugs are only Denial-of-Service" Linux Project[45]
- Most Overhyped Bug: MS08-067 Server Service NetpwPathCanonicalize() Stack Overflow (CVE-2008-4250) Anonymous[45]
- Best Song: Nice Report Doctor Raid
- Most Epic Fail: Twitter Gets Hacked and the "Cloud Crisis" Twitter
- Lifetime Achievement Award: Solar Designer[45]
2008
- Best Server-Side Bug: Windows IGMP Kernel Vulnerability (CVE-2007-0069) Alex Wheeler and Ryan Smith
- Best Client-Side Bug: Multiple URL protocol handling flaws Nate McFeters, Rob Carter, and Billy Rios
- Mass 0wnage: An unbelievable number of WordPress vulnerabilities
- Most Innovative Research: Lest We Remember: Cold Boot Attacks on Encryption Keys (honorable mention was awarded to Rolf Rolles for work on virtualization obfuscators) J. Alex Halderman, Seth Schoen, Nadia Heninger, William Clarkson, William Paul, Joseph Calandrino, Ariel Feldman, Rick Astley, Jacob Appelbaum, Edward Felten
- Lamest Vendor Response: McAfee's "Hacker Safe" certification program[46]
- Most Overhyped Bug: Dan Kaminsky's DNS Cache Poisoning Vulnerability (CVE-2008-1447)[46]
- Best Song: Packin' the K! by Kaspersky Labs[46]
- Most Epic Fail: Debian's flawed OpenSSL Implementation (CVE-2008-0166)
- Lifetime Achievement Award: Tim Newsham