New year, new attacks against Adobe zero-day
- 05 January, 2010 06:57
- Comments
Crooks are once again exploiting the zero-day hole in Adobe Reader and Acrobat to install a remote-control Trojan on victim machines.
The attacks start with a malicious .pdf that the Internet Storm Center has analyzed in depth. The ISC is a volunteer organization that tracks Internet attacks.
As the ISC notes, "malicious PDF documents are not rare these days," and attacks typically attach them to e-mails. But targeted attacks only sent to a small number of victims are often missed by security programs, and the attack sample sent in to the ISC was initially detected by only six out of 40 antivirus vendors, according to the analysis.
This particular attack attempts to install the PoisonIvy Trojan, which allows an attacker to gain remote control over an infected PC. It also drops off a harmless .pdf file named baby.pdf and then opens it with Reader, a bit of digital sleight-of-hand intended to disguise the attack.
The Adobe flaw has been under attack since it was disclosed last month. In its security bulletin, Adobe notes that for some combinations of Windows and Reader versions, this security hole will only allow for crashing Reader instead of installing malware.
In the bulletin, Adobe says it will release an update on January 12th, but until then the ISC suggests disabling Javascript in Reader and Acrobat (instructions in the bulletin). Using an alternate .pdf reader such as Foxit should also help mitigate the threat.
Nominations for the 2012 ARN IT Industry Awards open on Tuesday, June 12.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email ARN
- Follow ARN on twitter
- In Search of the Long-Term Archiving Solution —Tape Delivers Significant TCO Advantage over Disk
- Market Potential-Strategy Guide to the Active Archive Market
- Premier Media Group Fast Study
- Spectra Logic and Australian National University Success Story - March 2012
- Red Light In the Control Centre Saves Hours of Chaos
-
iOS 5 delivers 'a wealth of changes'
-
REVIEW: HTC Sensation - a powerful beast wrapped in a sturdy, aluminium shell
-
First look: Samsung Galaxy S III
-
Spotify tunes into Australia
-
Telstra and Navman Wireless extend GPS tracking partnership












Comments
Post new comment