Microsoft issues flood of critical patches

Microsoft Corp. on Tuesday released a flood of information on new and previously disclosed holes in a wide range of software products, many of them rated “critical” and well-suited to use by malicious hackers or computer virus writers, according to one security expert.

The company published four security bulletins, MS04-011, 012, 013 and 014 containing patches for 20 unique software vulnerabilities. Critical holes were found in the Internet Explorer Web browser, a standard Windows component for managing local system security and authentication, the Microsoft Secure Sockets Layer library (SSL) and Remote Procedure Call (RPC) Runtime Library, which is installed with Windows, Microsoft said.

The software patches touched a wide range of Microsoft’s products, from Windows 98 through Windows Server 2003 64-bit edition, as well as a number of versions of the Outlook Express e-mail program.

Among the most critical holes Microsoft warned customers about are:

– A buffer overrun vulnerability in the Local Security Authority Subsystem Service (LSASS), which is used to authenticate users locally and also in client-server environments. LSASS also has features used by Active Directory utilities. An attacker who could exploit the LSASS vulnerability could remotely attack and take total control of Windows 2000 and Windows XP systems. The same vulnerability does not affect Windows 98 or NT, and is rated “low” for Windows Server 2003, meaning that it is extremely difficult to exploit or will have only minimal impact on the system if exploited, according to Microsoft.

– A buffer overrun in the Private Communications Transport (PCT) protocol, which is part of Microsoft’s Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) library, which is used to secure communications between servers and clients on public networks and the Internet. PCT is a protocol in that library that was developed by Microsoft and Visa International Inc. to conduct encrypted communication on the Internet, Microsoft said.

An attacker who could exploit the PCT hole could take complete control of affected systems, installing programs, viewing, modifying or deleting data or changing user access to the system. Attackers could exploit the flaw by sending a TCP message to a vulnerable system using SSL. The message would have to be designed to cause the buffer overrun and run the attacker’s code on the machine, the company said.

The PCT hole was rated “critical” for Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 2000, “important” for Windows XP and “low” for Windows Server 2003, Microsoft said.

Eight of the 14 vulnerabilities fixed by MS04-011 address remote code execution problems. “I think you can see the pattern here,” said Marcus Sachs, the director of the Internet Storm Center. “[So] it is imperative that these patches be applied as soon as possible,” he said.

While Microsoft disclosed a number of other critical security holes in its bulletins, the LSASS and PCT holes are particularly dangerous because they can be triggered remotely and without any action being taken by users on affected systems, agreed Firas Raouf, chief operating officer of eEye Digital Security Inc. in Aliso Viejo, Calif.

EEye researchers discovered the LSASS vulnerability and reported it to Microsoft, Raouf said.

The two holes can also be exploited using common techniques such as creating stack-based overflows. That will accelerate the development of exploits for the two vulnerabilities, which are well-suited to use in an Internet worm like the Blaster or SQL Slammer worms, he said.

“The window of opportunity to remediate these is small. It’s likely that someone will repackage existing worms to attack the new vulnerabilities, so (Microsoft customers) need to patch their systems in the next couple days,” he said.

Sachs agreed that it is likely code will begin to surface with in the next several days attempting to exploit these vulnerabilities.

Microsoft also issued a revised cumulative patch, MS04-013, for recent versions of the Outlook Express e-mail client, which ships with most versions of the Windows operating system.

The bulletin also listed a critical new problem with the way Outlook Express interprets a kind of URL known as a MIME Encapsulation of Aggregate HTML, or MHTML URL. The vulnerability could allow an attacker to run their own HTML code on Windows systems using an affected Outlook Express client.

Even those not using Outlook Express should patch their systems since Internet Explorer shares some common files with it, Sachs said. “Merely by visiting (a malicious) Web site you could infect your computer” with a Trojan, he explained.

MHTML allows documents with MHTML-encoded content to be displayed in software applications like the Internet Explorer Web browser. To trigger the flaw, attackers would have to create a specially crafted MHTML URL, which use the prefix MHTML://. Attackers could launch an attack by tricking users into visiting a Web page containing the nefarious MHTML:// link or sending an HTML e-mail message with such a link in it, Microsoft said.

Security companies including Network Associates Inc. (NAI), Computer Associates International Inc., eEye, and Internet Security Systems Inc. issued statements on Tuesday warning customers about the newly disclosed vulnerabilities. Some, such as NAI, offered filters to detect and guard against malicious traffic trying to exploit the new holes.

CA is already seeing exploitation of the MHTML hole and said exploits for the other software vulnerabilities could follow.

“Since many of these issues are previously undisclosed, it may take a few days or weeks for attackers to develop exploit code and other forms of malware,” said Sam Curry, vice-president of eTrust Security Solutions, a division of CA, in an e-mail statement.

While eEye’s Raouf said that the monthly, cumulative bulletins generally made it easier for customers to deploy the security patches, he was critical of the company’s handling of vulnerability information, including the LSASS hole, which eEye reported to Microsoft in October, 2003.

“The downside (of the monthly bulletins) is that Microsoft is keeping critical vulnerabilities under wraps until enough can be put together, and that increases the likelihood that an unethical research firm will find the same flaw, not tell Microsoft about it and unleash hell,” he said.

Even when proper disclosure procedures are followed, the sheer number of new critical vulnerabilities disclosed on Tuesday will be a feast for virus writers.

“If somebody is looking to put together a worm in the next couple of days, they’ll have a number of vulnerabilities to choose from,” Raouf said.

“This is definitely the biggest and most significant (bulletin) in terms of…how many different pieces of software this hits and how many people this can potentially affect,” Curry said.

– With files from Chris Conrath, IT World Canada

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