http://news.com.com/Zero-day+attacks+continue+to+hit+Microsoft/2100-7349_3-6120481.html
By Joris Evers
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
September 27, 2006
Microsoft issued a rare, out-of-cycle Windows patch on Tuesday that
fixed one flaw, but attacks through other known, yet-to-be-plugged holes
continue.
Microsoft on Wednesday warned of "limited zero-day attacks" that exploit
a new flaw in PowerPoint, Microsoft's widely used presentation tool. For
the attack to be carried out, a user must first open a malicious
PowerPoint file attached to an e-mail or otherwise provided to them by
an attacker, Microsoft said in a security advisory.
"This issue can allow remote attackers to execute arbitrary code on a
vulnerable computer," Symantec said in an alert sent to customers. The
flaw affects PowerPoint in Office 2000, Office XP and Office 2003 on
Windows and Apple Computer's Mac OS X, it said. Attacks appear to be
aimed at specific targets, Symantec said.
For temporary protection against PowerPoint attacks, Microsoft suggests
keeping security software up-to-date and not opening presentations files
from untrusted sources. Also, PowerPoint Viewer 2003 is not vulnerable,
the company said.
The PowerPoint flaw is one of several security holes cybercrooks are
actively exploiting, but for which no patch exists, security experts
said. A flaw in Word has gone unpatched since early this month and a
flaw in an IE ActiveX control called daxctle.ocx first surfaced on Sept.
14.
"There is more than one thing going on right now in terms of zero-days,"
said Ken Dunham, director of the rapid response team at VeriSign's
iDefense. "The timing of these attacks and exploits is designed to be a
thorn in the side of Microsoft." Some security watchers have started to
coin the term "zero-day Wednesday."
Microsoft issued a "critical" security fix for Windows on Tuesday, two
weeks before its scheduled release date. The update repairs a flaw in a
Windows component called "vgx.dll." This component is meant to support
Vector Markup Language documents in the operating system.
Miscreants had been using the VML flaw to load malicious software onto
vulnerable PCs unbeknownst to the user. The hole could be exploited by
crafting a malicious file and providing a link to it on a Web site or in
an e-mail message. At one point several million domains were redirecting
to malicious VML sites, according to iDefense.
"This comes at a particularly challenging time for Microsoft," Siobhan
MacDermott, a McAfee spokeswoman, said in a statement. "It is currently
trying to convince consumers and businesses that it's a credible
provider of security software. It's like closing the stable door after
the horse already bolted. Too little too late."
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Received on Sep 28 2006