Mon, 12/15/2008 - 21:20 — Igor Donchenko
An unpatched security vulnerability in Internet Explorer v7 is being actively exploited in-the-wild. Worryingly, the successful exploit of this vulnerability allows attackers to control the infected computer and access any personal information without the user being aware.
The vulnerability centers on Internet Explorer’s handling of specially crafted XML tags which can leave the browser susceptible to a heap spray attack. In the attacks observed by ScanSafe, successful exploit would result in the installation of a data theft Trojan with autorun worm capabilities.
The timing of the release of the exploit appears to be a deliberate jab at Microsoft. On the second Tuesday of each month, dubbed “patch Tuesday”, Microsoft releases security updates for its products. On December 9th, Microsoft released 8 security patches to resolve a total of 28 vulnerabilities. Those patches do not address the IE7 zero-day flaw. Details of the IE7 exploit were reportedly released on December 6th and ScanSafe’s 24/7 scanners observed the first active exploit of zero-day on December 8th.
Mary Landesman, senior security researcher at ScanSafe, comments “Zero-day exploits involving any widely used software are particularly concerning. When it impacts a browser as widely used as Internet Explorer, it can have serious implications. Predictably, attackers were very quick to add the IE7 exploit to their tool kit and we anticipate these attacks will escalate over the coming weeks.”
In addition, two other zero-day vulnerabilities have been discovered. One impacts Microsoft SQL Server 2000 and is alleged to be remotely exploitable via SQL injection attacks. Alarmingly, unlike typical SQL injection attacks which pose the greatest risk to site visitors, this particular attack would directly impact the server as well. A third zero-day vulnerability has been reported in WordPad’s text conversion feature. Microsoft has reported that there are “targeted attacks seeking to exploit this vulnerability” and has released Microsoft Security Advisory 960906 in response to the discovery.
Source: http://www.scansafe.com