Service Location Protocol Slp

The Service Location Protocol (SLP, RFC 2608) allows an unauthenticated remote attacker to register arbitrary services. This could allow an attacker to use spoofed UDP traffic to conduct a ...

Service Location Protocol Slp 1

A new reflective Denial-of-Service (DoS) amplification vulnerability in the Service Location Protocol (SLP) allows threat actors to launch massive denial-of-service attacks with 2,200X amplification.

Service Location Protocol Slp 2

Security researchers have discovered a high-severity vulnerability in the Service Location Protocol (SLP) which could be exploited to launch among the largest DDoS amplification attacks ever seen. SLP ...

Service Location Protocol Slp 3

Homeland Security Today: Abuse of the Service Location Protocol May Lead to DoS Attacks

Service Location Protocol Slp 4

A vulnerability in the Service Location Protocol on internet-connected devices could create a DDoS amplification factor of up to 2200X. Security researchers sounded the alert about a vulnerability in ...

A newly discovered, high-severity flaw in a legacy Internet protocol used by various enterprise products can allow for attackers to amplify distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks up to 2,200 ...

Service Location Protocol Slp 6

Service area If your business serves customers within a specific local area, enter your service area. When you list your service area, this helps people know if you can visit or deliver to their location. You can set your service area based on the cities, zip codes, or other places you serve. Learn about how to set your service area.

Apps with location permission can access your device's location to give you location-based info, services, or ads. Learn how to manage location permissions for apps. If Location Accuracy (also known as Google Location Services) is on, Location Accuracy can collect data to improve location accuracy and location-based services.