Opera patches two browser security flaws
It has released an upgrade that addresses the vulnerabilities
TechWorld.com - Opera Software ASA has released an upgrade addressing two serious security flaws involving Macromedia Inc.'s Flash Player and a code execution bug affecting Linux and Unix users.
The first problem relates to Flash Player and was made public earlier this month. Macromedia warned that the bug in Flash Player, a widely used piece of desktop software, could allow attackers to take over a system.
The security research firm co-credited with discovering the bug, eEye Digital Security, said it had demonstrated "reliable exploitation" using the bug in the Internet Explorer browser, but other browsers are also said to be just as open to attack.
Opera's fix arrived this week with Opera 8.5.1, which includes Flash Player Version 7r61.
The release also fixes a problem identified by Secunia Research, involving the shell script used to launch Opera in Linux and Unix environments. The flawed script processes shell commands enclosed in URLs passed to Opera via the command line.
That means an attacker could execute malicious shell commands on a user's system via an innocent-seeming URL in an e-mail message, for example. The command would be executed when the user clicked on the URL and invoked Opera.
The shell script bug doesn't just affect Opera -- it is a variant of a problem with the Firefox browser disclosed in September.
Opera said the update also improves stability when viewing pages with Java for users of Japanese Mac OS X systems.



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