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New Microsoft patch doesn't plug all holes

By Wilbert de Vries and Paul Roberts
July 7, 2004 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - HAARLEM, The Netherlands -- Microsoft Corp.'s effort last week to fix a vulnerability in the Internet Explorer Web browser program and end the latest series of Internet attacks doesn't address another closely related and dangerous vulnerability, according to a security specialist.
Dutch security expert Jelmer Kuperus published code on the Web that he says can be used to break into fully patched Windows systems using a slightly modified version of an attack called Download.Ject that Microsoft patched last week. The new attack targets a hole in a different Windows component than the one addressed by Microsoft's software patch on Friday. Using a similar attack, malicious hackers could break into patched Windows machines, Kuperus said.
Microsoft confirmed yesterday that the company is aware of the exploit code but doesn't believe any customers have been attacked using the Shell.Application exploit, a spokeswoman said.
Microsoft last week introduced a security update for Internet Explorer 6.0 to end the threat of Download.Ject. The update disables a Windows component called ADODB.Stream, which was allegedly being used by a Russian criminal gang called the Hangup Team to install malicious code on computers.
By attacking a different Windows ActiveX component called Shell.Application, hackers can load malicious code onto machines.
The attack relies on a vulnerability in Shell.Application discovered and disclosed in January by a security expert known by the online handle "http-equiv," Kuperus said.
To prove his point, Kuperus posted a copy of attack code that targets the Shell.Application component on a Web site he maintains. Web surfers that use Windows XP with Internet Explorer and visit the page are confronted with a screen that freezes Windows. According to Kuperus this example is harmless, but the exploit could be used in the same way the group of Russian criminals exploited the ADODB.Stream vulnerability in a series of attacks in June.

Those attacks combined compromise unpatched Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) Web servers with attacks using two vulnerabilities in Windows and the Internet Explorer Web browser. Web surfers visiting compromised Web sites had malicious code secretly downloaded to run on their systems. When run, the code redirected Web browsers to Web sites controlled by the hackers, from which personal data was downloaded and a Trojan horse program captured keystrokes (see story).
Kuperus joined the expert known as http-equiv to create computer code that demonstrated the Shell.Application vulnerability. After the attacks in June, the two anticipated that the patch issued by Microsoft wouldn't be comprehensive and began writing a new exploit before Microsoft actually plugged the ADODB.Stream vulnerability.
Afew hours after Microsoft issued its update last Friday, Kuperus posted the new exploit on his site.
"We discovered that by simply switching components, the exploit is back in business," Kuperus said.
Microsoft acknowledged that the Shell.Application has similar capabilities to the ADODB.Stream component. However, it doesn't yet have configuration changes to address the vulnerability, as it did with ADODB.Stream, a spokeswoman said.
Microsoft is investigating the issue and is planning a series of updates to IE in the coming weeks that will provide additional security for its customers, she said.

Wilbert de Vries is an editor for WebWereld and InfoWorld Netherlands, both publications of IDG Communications Netherlands, a subsidiary of IDG Communications.

Reprinted with permission from IDG.net. Story copyright 2010 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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