Bianca Kastl
Seit Mitte 2025 steht die elektronische Patientenakte für alle zur Verfügung – nach ein paar kleineren oder größeren Sicherheitsproblemen im Vorfeld, sei es vor einem Jahr auf dem 38C3 oder Ende April zum deutschlandweiten Start. Zeit ein Fazit zu ziehen: Ist die ePA jetzt sicher? Wurden nachhaltige Veränderungen durchgeführt, die zu mehr Sicherheit führen? Kann der Umgang mit der IT-Sicherheit «eines der größten IT-Projekte der Bundesrepublik» für zukünftige Digitalprojekte hilfreich sein? Zeit, mit etwas Abstand auf das zu blicken, was war, was ist und was sich abzeichnet nicht nur bei der ePA, sondern auch beim Umgang mit IT-Sicherheit bei ähnlichen Vorhaben in Deutschland. Eine umfassende Analyse der Historie und der Ursachen einer der weitreichendsten Fehlentwicklungen im Bereich der IT-Sicherheit der letzten Jahre, die sich in weit mehr zeigt, als nur in schlechter Prüfung der Anwesenheit von Gesundheitskarten im Gesundheitswesen.
Felix Domke, Karsten Burger
Let's have a (hopefully) final look at Diesel emission cheating. This technical talk summarizes what I learned by reverse-engineering dozens of engine ECU software, how I found and characterized "interesting logic" which, more often than not, ended up being a court-approved "defeat device". What started as a "curious investigation" in 2015 to obtain a ground truth to widespread media reports of "VW being caught for cheating" ended up as a full-blown journey through the then-current state of the Diesel car industry. In this talk, Karsten and Felix will walk through the different implementation of defeat devices, their impact on emissions, and the challenges in documenting seemingly black boxes in court-proven expert reports.
Martin Heckel, Florian Adamsky, Daniel Gruss
Last year at 38c3, we gave a talk titled "Ten Years of Rowhammer: A Retrospect (and Path to the Future)." In this talk, we summarized 10 years of Rowhammer research and highlighted gaps in our understanding. For instance, although nearly all DRAM generations from DDR3 to DDR5 are vulnerable to the Rowhammer effect, we still do not know its real-world prevalence. For that reason, we invited everyone at 38c3 last year to participate in our large-scale Rowhammer prevalence study. In this year's talk, we will first provide an update on Rowhammer research and present our results from that study. A lot has happened in Rowhammer research in 2025. We have evidence that DDR5 is as vulnerable to Rowhammer as previous generations. Other research shows that not only can adversaries target rows, but columns can also be addressed and used for bit flips. Browser-based Rowhammer attacks are back on the table with Posthammer and with ECC. fail, we can mount Rowhammer attacks on DDR4 with ECC memory. In our large-scale study, we measure Rowhammer prevalence in a fully automated cross-platform framework, FlippyR.AM, using the available state-of-the-art software-based DRAM and Rowhammer tools. Our framework automatically gathers information about the DRAM and uses 5 tools to reverse-engineer the DRAM addressing functions, and based on the reverse-engineered functions, uses 7 tools to mount Rowhammer. We distributed the framework online and via USB thumb drives to thousands of participants from December 30, 2024, to June 30, 2025. Overall, we collected 1006 datasets from 822 systems with various CPUs, DRAM generations, and vendors. Our study reveals that out of 1006 datasets, 453 (371 of the 822 unique systems) succeeded in the first stage of reverse-engineering the DRAM addressing functions, indicating that successfully and reliably recovering DRAM addressing functions remains a significant open problem. In the second stage, 126 (12.5 % of all datasets) exhibited bit flips in our fully automated Rowhammer attacks. Our results show that fully automated, i.e., weaponizable, Rowhammer attacks work on a lower share of systems than FPGA-based and lab experiments indicated, but at 12.5%, are still a practical vector for threat actors. Furthermore, our results highlight that the two most pressing research challenges around Rowhammer exploitability are more reliable reverse-engineering tools for DRAM addressing functions, as 50 % of datasets without bit flips failed in the DRAM reverse-engineering stage, and reliable Rowhammer attacks across diverse processor microarchitectures, as only 12.5 % of datasets contained bit flips. Addressing each of these challenges could double the number of systems susceptible to Rowhammer and make Rowhammer a more pressing threat in real-world scenarios.
Alvar C.H. Freude
Datenschutz darf auch Spaß machen, und alle können dabei etwas lernen, egal ob Einsteiger oder Profi-Hacker: Bei dem Datenschutz- und Datenpannen-Quiz kämpfen vier Kandidat:innen aus dem Publikum zusammen mit dem Publikum um den Sieg. Nicht nur Wissen rund um IT-Sicherheit und Datenschutz sondern auch eine schnelle Reaktion und das nötige Quäntchen Glück entscheiden über Sieg und Niederlage. Die Unterhaltsame Datenschutz-Quiz-Show mit Bildungsauftrag!
Jedes Jahr zwischen Weihnachten und Neujahr treffen sich tausende Hacker*innen zum Chaos Communication Congress in Hamburg. Der Azubi-Tag ist eine günstige Gelegenheit für Auszubildende, den Congress zu besuchen, den CCC kennenzulernen und viel über IT-Security, Technik und Gesellschaft zu lernen. Wir freuen uns, diesen Tag nun zum dritten Mal anbieten zu können.
Keno, Darius Auding
Die Teckids-Gemeinschaft bringt Kinder, Jugendliche und Erwachsene zusammen, um gemeinsam aktiv für eine verstehbare (digitale) Welt zu sein.
mixy1, Luke Bjorn Scerri, girogio
3 years ago, 3 Maltese students were arrested and charged with computer misuse after disclosing a vulnerability to a local company that developed a mobile app for students. Through persistent media pressure, the students managed to obtain a presidential pardon to drop the case and funding for their lawyers. However, through this journey, there were mentions of punishment for retaliating through media disclosure. The story has not concluded, and there will be no amendments to the Maltese computer misuse law for the foreseeable future.
Frédéric Hoguin
The French ISP 'Free' was the first to introduce a set-top box in France in 2002, named the Freebox. Four years later, the fifth version of the Freebox was released and distributed to customers. It comprises two devices: a router, and a PVR called the Freebox HD, both running Linux. The Freebox HD had innovative features at the time, such as live television control and HD capabilities. Such a device has a lot of potential for running homebrew, so I decided to hack it. I present how I got arbitrary code execution on the Freebox HD and then root privileges, using a chain of two 0-day exploits, one of which is in the Linux kernel. I then analyze the device, run homebrew software, and explain the structure of the ISP's private network that I uncovered while exploring the device.
Romain Malmain
Mobile phones are central to everyday life: we communicate, entertain ourselves, and keep vast swaths of our digital lives on them. That ubiquity makes high-risk groups such as journalists, activists, and dissidents prime targets for sophisticated spyware that exploits device vulnerabilities. On Android devices, GPU drivers have repeatedly served as the final escalation vector into the kernel. To study and mitigate that risk, we undertook a research project to virtualize the Qualcomm Android kernel and the KGSL graphics driver from scratch in QEMU. This new environment enables deep debugging, efficient coverage collection, and large-scale fuzzing across server farms, instead of relying on a handful of preproduction devices. This talk will highlight the technical aspects of our research, starting with the steps required to boot the Qualcomm mobile kernel in QEMU, all the way up to the partial emulation of the GPU. Then, we will present how we moved from our emulation prototype to a full-fledged fuzzer based on LibAFL QEMU.
Bonnie, keldo, Andi Bräu
Lightning Talks - Tag 3
Nils Rollshausen
Join us as we hack at a popular children's smartwatch and expose the secrets of every fifth child in Norway, their parents, and millions more.
Elise Amber Katze
The Tegra X2 is an SoC used in devices such as the Magic Leap One, and Tesla's Autopilot 2 & 2.5 promising a secure bootchain. But how secure really is the secure boot? In this talk I go over how I went from a secured Magic Leap One headset, to exploiting the bootloader over USB, to doing fault injection to dump the BootROM, to finding and exploiting an unpatchable vulnerability in the BootROM's USB recovery mode affecting all Tegra X2s.
Christopher Kunz, Sylvester
In August 2025 Phrack published the dump of an APT member's workstation. It was full of exploits and loot from government networks, cell carriers and telcos. The dump sparked a government investigation, and corpos like LG and Korea Telecom were asked to explain themselves. Hours before an onsite audit, the data center mysteriously caught fire, destroying almost a hundred servers. Then another data center burned - and unfortunately, there was even one death. The talk aims to revisit this mysterious sequence of tragic incidents. [TW: Suicide, self-harm]
Benjamin W. Broersma
ORM's and/or developers don't understand databases, transactions, or concurrency.
Thijs Raymakers
Transient execution CPU vulnerabilities, like Spectre, have been making headlines since 2018. However, their most common critique is that these types of vulnerabilities are not really practical. Even though it is cool to leak `/etc/shadow` with a CPU bug, it has limited real-world impact. In this talk, we take Spectre out for a walk and let it see the clouds, by leaking memory across virtual machine boundaries at a public cloud provider, bypassing mitigations against these types of attacks. Our report was awarded with a $151,515 bug bounty, Google Cloud's highest bounty yet.
Shinjo "peremen" Park, Yonghyu "perillamint" Ban
2025 was a bad year for South Korean mobile network operators. All three operators (SK Telecom, KT, LG U+) were affected by breach in some part of their respective network: HSS of SK Telecom, femtocells of KT. Meanwhile, handling of the breach by each operators and post-mortem analysis of each breaches have stark differences. The technical details and implemented mitigations are often buried under the vague terms, and occasionally got lost in translation to English. In this talk, I will cover the technical aspects of SK Telecom and KT's breach, and how the operators are coping to the breach and what kind of measurements have been performed to secure their network.
Kire, Rahel
Auch in der Schweizer Netzpolitik ging es im auslaufenden Jahr drunter und drüber. Wir blicken mit gewohntem Schalk auf das netzpolitische Jahr 2025 zwischen Bodensee und Matterhorn zurück - und diskutieren jene Themen, die relevant waren und relevant bleiben.
Benjamin Kollenda
EntrySign opened the door to custom microcode on AMD Zen CPUs earlier this year. Using a weakness in the signature verification we can load custom microcode updates and modify behavior of stock AMD Zen 1-5 CPUs. While AMD has released patches to address this weakness on some CPUs, we can still use unpatched systems for our analysis. In this talk we cover what we found out about microcode, what we saw in the microcode ROM, the tooling we build, how we worked to find out more and how you can write & test your own microcode on your own AMD Zen systems. We have our tools up on https://github.com/AngryUEFI for everyone to play around with and hopefully help us understand microcode more than we currently do.
sjaelv, MultisampledNight
The Spectrum is a newly founded queer-feminist, intersectional hackspace centering FLINTA+, disabled, and marginalized beings. We see hacking as playful exploration—of technology, art, and ideas—to reimagine what inclusion and collaboration can be. At 39C3, we share how awareness, accessibility, and transdisciplinary creation can transform community and hack the norm.
Mischa Meier (mmisc), Annika Kuntze
Die AI Cyber Challenge (AIxCC) der DARPA hatte zum Ziel, die Grenzen der autonomen Cybersicherheit zu erweitern: Können AI-Systeme Software-Schwachstellen unabhängig, in Echtzeit und ohne menschliche Hilfe identifizieren, verifizieren und beheben? Im Laufe von zwei Jahren entwickelten Teams aus aller Welt „Cyber Reasoning Systems“ (CRS), die in der Lage sind, komplexe Open-Source-Software zu analysieren, Code zu analysieren, reproducer zu generieren, um zu zeigen, dass ein gemeldeter Fehler kein Fehlalarm ist, und schließlich Patches zu synthetisieren. Unser Team nahm an dieser Challenge teil und entwickelte von Grund auf ein eigenes CRS. In diesem Vortrag geben wir Einblicke in den Wettbewerb: Wie funktioniert die LLM-gesteuerte Schwachstellenerkennung tatsächlich, welche Designentscheidungen sind wichtig und wie sind die Finalisten-Teams an das Problem herangegangen?