Channel News and Analysis - Channel Insider
Empowering the next generation Channel
 

Bull’s Eye Awards
Nominations Open for Channel Insider 2009 Bull’s Eye Awards
Nominations are now open for the Channel Insider 2009 Bull’s Eye Awards, which recognize excellence in customer service, technology prowess, business acumen, channel leadership, communications and community building, and innovation among vendors, solution providers, distributors and channel services companies.



Sponsored Links
  • Control VM Sprawl, What You Don’t Know Can Hurt You
  • FREE Sophos Encryption Tool: Encrypt, compress and share files easily
  • LSI 6Gb/s Portfolio Expands to Include SATA+SAS HBAs
  • Reduce the cost of managing your mobile workers.
  • Find out 7 Ways to Drive Data Center Efficiency
  • SonicWALL breaks through network and email gridlock
  • Save up to 40% on calling costs with Avaya Aura™



  •  

    Microsoft Plugs Code Execution Holes on Patch Day

    in Channel News and Analysis


    Article Rating:starstarstarstarstar / 0
    Article Views: 869

    Rate This Article:
    Add This Article To:
    The December batch of updates from Microsoft includes a fix for a previously reported WINS server flaw; Microsoft explains why some code execution flaws aren't rated "critical."

    Microsoft on Tuesday released fixes for five vulnerabilities in Windows products, including a patch for a known security issue in the WINS (Windows Internet Name Service) name server.

    As expected, the company released five advisories with "important" severity ratings but warned that four of the five could lead to code execution attacks.

    Microsoft typically rates code execution flaws as "critical," and the lowered ratings raised some eyebrows since independent researchers have already warned of the serious nature of the WINS vulnerability, which could allow a remote attacker to take complete control of an affected system.

    According to Stephen Toulouse, program manager at the Microsoft Security Response Center, "critical" ratings are reserved for bugs that the company considers "wormable."

    "A critical vulnerability means that, in the default scenario on a PC connected to the Internet, a criminal could exploit it in such a way that it spreads from machine to machine. We reserve critical ratings for vulnerabilities that are wormable," Toulouse told eWEEK.com.

    Resource Library:

    "Code execution does not necessarily mean it's critical," he said, explaining that the WINS vulnerability was rated one step below because it was not an Internet-facing technology and because the service is not installed by default on Windows systems.

    The WINS patch (MS04-045) comes just two weeks after a private research firm warned that it could lead to complete system hijack. Microsoft confirmed as much in its December advisory.

    "An attacker who successfully exploited the most severe of these vulnerabilities could take complete control of an affected system, including installing programs; viewing, changing or deleting data; or creating new accounts that have full privileges," the company said.

    The company said WINS users were at risk of system hijack because of the way the WINS server handles computer name validation and association context validation. A hacker could exploit the name validation flaw by constructing a malicious network packet that could potentially allow remote code execution on an affected system.

    According to the alert, the association context vulnerability could allow an attacker to construct a malicious network packet to take complete control of an affected system. In Windows Server 2003, the company said an exploit would only result in a denial-of-service condition.

    Microsoft already released bulletin MS04-041 to plug two holes in WordPad that put users at risk of code execution attacks. Affected software include Windows NT Server 4.0, Windows 2000, Windows XP Service Pack 1 and Windows Server 2003.

    The WordPad flaws exist in the table conversion and font conversion features. While a successful attack could lead to harmful code execution, Microsoft said significant user interaction is required to exploit both vulnerabilities.

    Next Page: Patch No. 3 fixes bugs in the DHCP Server service.

    A third patch, MS04-042, corrects two bugs in the DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) Server service that could allow code execution and denial-of-service attacks. The DHCP flaw affects Windows NT Server 4.0 customers.

    Microsoft warned that a successful exploit of the DHCP holes could allow an attacker to take complete control of an affected system, including installing programs; viewing, changing, or deleting data; or creating new accounts that have full privileges.

    A separate advisory, MS04-043, was released to stop a buffer overrun found in the Windows HyperTerminal utility. Affected software includes Windows NT Server 4.0, Windows 2000, Windows XP (SP1 and SP2) and Windows Server 2003.

    The company warned that an attacker could construct a malicious HyperTerminal session file to launch code on a vulnerable system. "This vulnerability could attempt to be exploited through a malicious Telnet URL if HyperTerminal has been set as the default Telnet client. An attacker who successfully exploited this vulnerability could take complete control of an affected system," according to the advisory.

    Microsoft has scrapped its plans for Windows 2000 SP5. Click here to read more.

    The fifth "important" advisory for December, MS04-044, corrects issues in Windows Kernel and LSASS that could allow privilege elevation attacks. Microsoft said a successful exploit could put users at risk of having programs installed or data viewed, deleted or changed.

    The company also reissued the MS04-028 advisory, which affected JPEG Parsing (GDI+) in Windows, Office, Graphics Application and Developer Applications subsystem in Microsoft Windows.

    The reissue addresses newly available updates for Microsoft Visual FoxPro 8.0 and the Windows .Net Framework 1.0 and 1.1 without Service Pack 1.

    Two of the five December bulletins apply to Windows XP Service Pack 2, but the severity rating is reduced to "moderate" for those customers.

    Check out eWEEK.com's for the latest security news, reviews and analysis. And for insights on security coverage around the Web, take a look at eWEEK.com Security Center Editor Larry Seltzer's Weblog.



    Discuss Microsoft Plugs Code Execution Holes on Patch Day
     
    >>> Be the FIRST to comment on this article!
     

     
     
    >>> More Channel News and Analysis Articles          >>> More By Ryan Naraine
     


     


    [ci] feeds
    XML
    Add Channel News, Product Reviews, Trends and Analysis to your RSS newsreader or My Yahoo!


    HTML PLAIN TEXT

    Keep on top of news for VARs and Resellers with CI's Weekly Newsletter and Alerts.

     


    CHANNEL RESOURCE CENTER
     
     
    Enterprise Mobility Zone
    The Enterprise Mobility Zone (EMZ) blog is a tool designed to help senior IT executives discuss, create and deploy next-generation mobile strategies in their organizations.
    Go beyond yesterday's tactical approach to mobility!
     
    Build A More Efficient Data Center
    Demands are growing but budgets are not. Solve your pressing IT issues using the resources you already have. Determine which technologies can help you drive efficiencies and how they are applied. Gain a quick ROI on new initiatives
    Find out how
    Let Enterprise TechBrief do the work for you. Aggregated content, tech news, product reviews, vendor updates, how-to’s—all you need to boost your efficiencies and cut costs, all from one place.
    enterprisetechbrief.com