Site icon Secplicity – Security Simplified

IE Cumulative Patch Fixes Three New Security Flaws

Severity: Medium

Summary:

Exposure:

In a security bulletin released today as part of Patch Day, Microsoft describes three new vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer (IE) 9.0 and earlier versions, running on all current versions of Windows. Microsoft rates the aggregate severity of these new flaws as Important.

The most severe of these three new IE vulnerabilities is another insecure Dynamic Link Library (DLL) loading vulnerability, similar to the ones we’ve described in many previous Microsoft alerts. In a nutshell, this class of flaw involves an attacker enticing one of your users into opening some sort of booby-trapped file from the same location as a specially crafted, malicious DLL file. If you do open the booby-trapped file, it will execute code in the malicious DLL file with your privileges. If you have local administrative privileges, the attacker could exploit this type of issue to gain complete control of your computer. In this particular case, the vulnerability is triggered specifically by HTML files.

In most cases, an attacker would have trouble exploiting this insecure library loading vulnerabilities over a network, or the Internet. Typically, they’d have to entice you to download and save both an HTML and DLL file to your desktop, then open the HTML file, which significantly mitigates the risk of the attack. Theoretically, an attacker could exploit it over a network using UNC or WebDAV locations if then can convince you to add these locations to your Windows PATH. However, that is unlikely as well.

The remaining vulnerabilities consists of a less severe Cross-Site or Cross-Domain Scripting (XSS) flaw and another information disclosure issue. Among other things, an attacker might leverage the XSS vulnerability to view information (such as cookies) from another domain or site, which he shouldn’t have access to; or to execute scripts with another domain or sites privileges. Keep in mind, today’s attackers commonly hijack legitimate web pages and booby-trap them with malicious code. Typically, they do this via hosted web ads or through SQL injectionand XSS attacks. Even recognizable and authentic websites could pose a risk to your users if hijacked in this way.

Solution Path:

These patches fix serious issues.You should download, test, and deploy the appropriate IE patches immediately, or let Windows Automatic Update do it for you.

* Server Core installations NOT affected

For All WatchGuard Users:

These attacks travel as normal-looking HTTP traffic, which you must allow if your network users need to access the World Wide Web. Therefore, the patches above are your best solution.

Status:

Microsoft has released patches to fix these vulnerabilities.

References:

This alert was researched and written by Corey Nachreiner, CISSP.

Exit mobile version