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Hackers post attacks for Windows DLLs

Hackers post attacks for Windows DLLs

By:  Gregg Keizer  On: 25 Aug 2010 For: Computerworld Creator

This week dozens of exploits to subvert Firefox, Chrome, Word, Photoshop, Skype and other programs have been posted. They are designed to exploit dynamic link libraries in Microsoft Corp.’s Windows operating system

Format string vulnerabilities were long thought to be harmless, but in the late 1990s, researchers figured out how to exploit them to execute malware.

Moore had a different analogy in mind.

"The most recent example I can think of is the AxMan tool I released in 2006," said Moore in an e-mail reply to questions. "It resulted in hundreds of new ActiveX bugs and used a similar model of leveraging the security community at large to identify vulnerable applications."

AxMan was a Web-based fuzzing tool designed to find flaws in ActiveX controls, the widely-used and often-buggy add-on technology for Microsoft's Internet Explorer.

Moore believes that the rush of exploits will be a good thing in the end. "Overall, [AxMan] worked [and] ActiveX exploits sharply declined a few months after the tool's release and software vendors had an easy way to make sure they didn't repeat common mistakes," Moore said, referring to four years ago. "My hope is that having a quality assessment tool available for the DLL issue will lead to this being a non-issue in a few months."

Some developers, such as Wireshark and BitTorrent -- the latter maintains the uTorrent client -- have said they have fixes in the wings, and will update their software within days.

Microsoft , on the other hand, has declined to name vulnerable applications, even though researchers filed bug reports five months ago.

"Microsoft is analyzing its own applications to identify any that are affected by this new remote vector for DLL preloading attacks," Jerry Bryant, group manager with the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC), said in an e-mail Tuesday. "We will take appropriate actions to protect customers which may include releasing security advisories with mitigations and workarounds and security updates to address the issue."

Until patches are available, Microsoft has urged users to download the free tool that blocks locks DLLs from loading from remote directories, USB drives, Web sites and an organization's network.

 

 










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gregg keizer Gregg Keizer is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.
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