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ARN's A-Z guide to networking 19 December, 2007 14:50:54
As business needs change, so do the requirements for the business backbone. ARN looks at networking trends and technologies and reports on predictions for 2008 and beyond. - +
Microsoft plans just two patches this week 12 November, 2007 08:44:58
One bulletin rated critical, the other importantMicrosoft has scheduled just two security updates for Tuesday to fix flaws in Windows 2000, XP and Server 2003. One of the two is a leftover from October that was bumped at the last minute. - +
Adobe patches critical PDF vulnerability 23 October, 2007 09:05:10
Adobe Systems patched its Reader and Acrobat programs today to fix a flaw that exposed most Windows XP users to exploits arriving in malicious PDF files.Adobe Systems patched its Reader and Acrobat programs today to fix a flaw that exposed most Windows XP users to exploits arriving in malicious PDF files. - +
Microsoft schedules seven patches for next week 05 October, 2007 08:10:10
It's preparing critical updates for Windows, IE, Outlook Express and WordMicrosoft slated seven security updates for release early next week that target vulnerabilities in Windows, Internet Explorer, Outlook Express, Word and SharePoint. - +
Microsoft: Just a pair of security updates coming next week 09 November, 2007 06:41:07
Microsoft will issue two sets of patches next Tuesday, one of them a critical Windows fix.Security administrators should have a pretty easy time of it next Tuesday as Microsoft says it will issue just two updates in its monthly security software release.
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Microsoft Tuesday released two security bulletins that fixed a pair of flaws in Windows, including a vulnerability that had been the root of a monthslong debate over patching responsibility.
One of the updates was rated critical, Microsoft's highest threat ranking, while the other was pegged as important, the next-lowest notch in the company's four-step scoring system.
MS07-061 patched the Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) protocol handler bug in Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 that Microsoft admitted was its job to fix only after months of denying that a vulnerability existed in its software. In a security advisory posted October 11, Microsoft owned up to the flaw.
The vulnerability has been exploited in the wild for weeks, most recently by a wave of attacks using rigged PDF files.
Although only PCs running XP or Server 2003 that were also equipped with IE 7 have been shown to be at risk, Microsoft pushed the patch to all users of those operating systems, no matter which browser they had installed. "Microsoft has not identified any way to exploit this vulnerability on systems using Internet Explorer 6," the security bulletin said, "[but] as a defense-in-depth measure, this security update is made available to all customers using supported editions of Windows XP and Windows Server 2003, regardless of which version of Internet Explorer is installed."
Andrew Storms, director of security operations at nCircle, applauded the proactive move. "Microsoft's saying that even though it's unable to exploit [the URI protocol handler bug] for IE 6, the bug still exists, and someone else may come along and figure out an exploit," he said.
According to Eric Schultze, the chief technology officer of Shavlik Technologies, Microsoft is simply following protocol. "They're giving the patch regardless of the SKU of XP or Server 2003, because they can't deliver it as an IE patch," he said. The flawed component, the "shell32.dll" file, is part of Windows, not Internet Explorer.
But although the fix should put an end to URI protocol handler exploits which rely on IE -- or, as Storms put it, "at least until the next attacks" -- other applications that register buggy handlers will still have to patch their own code. Microsoft's security experts, including Mark Miller, the director of the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC), and Mike Reavey, the operations manager for the group, made that clear in an interview a month ago.
The other bulletin issued today, dubbed MS07-062, patches a DNS cache poisoning vulnerability in Windows 2000 SP4, and Windows Server 2003 SP1 and SP2.
"This is a classic, a nostalgic man-in-the-middle kind of vulnerability," said Storms, who also knocked Microsoft for taking so long to fix the flaw. "This is something that other DNS [Domain Name System] vendors, like BIND, have known about and fixed years ago." Storms, in fact, was quickly able to dig up reports of the DNS vulnerability from as far back as 2002.
"It's not an easy thing to take advantage of, but I'm willing to bet that there's still some script-kiddie code out there that can be modified for this vulnerability," Storms said. An attacker would probably partner an exploit with a phishing e-mail that would entice the recipient to a trusted Web site, say eBay. The exploit, however, would redirect the user to a fake site to plunder personal or financial information.
"This sort of vulnerability has impacted other DNS servers in the past and has been well understood by attackers for a long time," said Chris Valasek, a researcher with IBM's X-Force, in an e-mail. "Now that Microsoft DNS Server's susceptibility has been disclosed we may see renewed attacks of this sort."
The only surprise in this month's patches, said Schultze, was the omission of a fix for a bug in third-party anti-piracy software that's bundled with Windows. The vulnerability in Macrovision's SafeDisc digital rights management software was confirmed last week.
"I'm guessing that Microsoft wasn't able to wrap the updated [Macrovision] driver in its own installers in time," Schultze said. "Maybe we'll see it as an out-of-band release."
The two bulletins' patches are available via the Microsoft Update and Windows Update services, as well as through Windows Server Update Services (WSUS).
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