Qi Wang (Tsinghua University), Jianjun Chen (Tsinghua University), Jingcheng Yang (Tsinghua University), Jiahe Zhang (Tsinghua University), Yaru Yang (Tsinghua University), Haixin Duan (Tsinghua University)

Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is a cornerstone of modern real-time communication systems, powering voice calls, text messaging, and multimedia sessions across services such as VoIP, VoLTE, and RCS. While SIP provides mechanisms for authentication and identity assertion, its inherent flexibility poses the risk of semantic ambiguity among implementations that can be exploited by attackers.

In this paper, we present SIPChimera, a novel black-box fuzzing framework designed to systematically identify ambiguity-based identity spoofing vulnerabilities across SIP implementations. We evaluated SIPChimera against six widely used open-source SIP servers—including Asterisk and OpenSIPS—and nine popular user agents, uncovering that attackers could spoof their identity via manipulating identity headers and circumvent authentication. We demonstrate the real-world impact of these vulnerabilities by evaluating five VoIP devices, seven commercial SIP deployments, and three carrier-grade RCS-based SMS platforms. Our experiments show that attackers can exploit these vulnerabilities to perform caller ID spoofing in VoIP calls and send spoofed SMS messages over RCS, impersonating arbitrary users or services. We have responsibly disclosed our findings to affected vendors and received positive acknowledgments. We finally propose remedies to mitigate those issues.

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Enhancing Legal Document Security and Accessibility with TAF

Renata Vaderna (Independent Researcher), Dušan Nikolić (University of Novi Sad), Patrick Zielinski (New York University), David Greisen (Open Law Library), BJ Ard (University of Wisconsin–Madison), Justin Cappos (New York University)

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From Perception to Protection: A Developer-Centered Study of Security...

Kunlin Cai (University of California, Los Angeles), Jinghuai Zhang (University of California, Los Angeles), Ying Li (University of California, Los Angeles), Zhiyuan Wang (University of Virginia), Xun Chen (Independent Researcher), Tianshi Li (Northeastern University), Yuan Tian (University of California, Los Angeles)

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Breaking Isolation: A New Perspective on Hypervisor Exploitation via...

Gaoning Pan (Hangzhou Dianzi University & Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Sensitive Data Security and Confidentiality Governance), Yiming Tao (Zhejiang University), Qinying Wang (EPFL and Zhejiang University), Chunming Wu (Zhejiang University), Mingde Hu (Hangzhou Dianzi University & Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Sensitive Data Security and Confidentiality Governance), Yizhi Ren (Hangzhou Dianzi University & Zhejiang…

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