DROID by Motorola- Free from Verizon Wireless! *
  
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

News: Do you like Motorola Droid?
Advanced search
Scratch-Proof your Motorola Droid           Best Price for Verizon Phones       Droid Screen Protection Cheap Cell Phone Accessories
Pages: [1]
Print
Share this topic on AskShare this topic on Del.icio.usShare this topic on DiggShare this topic on FacebookShare this topic on FurlShare this topic on GoogleShare this topic on LiveShare this topic on MySpaceShare this topic on NewsvineShare this topic on RedditShare this topic on SlashdotShare this topic on SpurlShare this topic on SquidooShare this topic on StumbleUponShare this topic on TwitterShare this topic on TipdShare this topic on YahooShare this topic on Google buzz
Author Topic: Microsoft Confirms First Windows 7 Zero-Day Bug  (Read 113 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
vpnavy
Administrator
Hero Member
*****

Cookies: 7
Online Online

Gender: Male
Posts: 1312



WWW
« on: November 22, 2009, 04:34:09 AM »


Microsoft confirms first Windows 7 zero-day bug
Urges users to block ports until a patch is ready, but workaround cripples services
By Gregg Keizer
November 14, 2009 08:11 AM ET

Computerworld -  Editor's note: This story has been updated with corrected information about the ports Microsoft says should be blocked and the services that would be affected.

Microsoft late on Friday confirmed that an unpatched vulnerability exists in Windows 7, but downplayed the problem, saying most users would be protected from attack by blocking two ports on their firewall.

In a security advisory, Microsoft acknowledged that a bug in SMB (Server Message Block), a Microsoft-made network file and print-sharing protocol, could be used by attackers to cripple Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 machines.

The zero-day vulnerability was first reported by Canadian researcher Laurent Gaffie last Wednesday, when he revealed the bug and posted proof-of-concept attack code to the Full Disclosure security mailing list and his blog. According to Gaffie, exploiting the flaw crashes Windows 7 and Server 2008 R2 systems so thoroughly that the only recourse is to manually power off the computers.

At the time, Microsoft only said it was investigating Gaffie's reports.

On Friday, it took the next step and issued the advisory. "Microsoft is aware of public, detailed exploit code that would cause a system to stop functioning or become unreliable," Dave Forstrom, a spokesman for Microsoft security group, said in an e-mail. "The company is not aware of attacks to exploit the reported vulnerability at this time."

Forstrom echoed Gaffie's comments earlier in the week that while an exploit could incapacitate a PC, the vulnerability could not be used by hackers to install malicious code on a Windows 7 system.

Both SMBv1 and its successor, SMBv2, contain the bug. "Windows Vista, Windows Server 2008, Windows XP, Windows Server 2003 and Windows 2000 are not affected," assured Forstrom.

Attacks could be aimed at any browser, not just Internet Explorer (IE), Microsoft warned. After tricking users into visiting a malicious site or a previously-compromised domain, hackers could feed them specially-crafted URIs (uniform resource identifier), and then crash their PCs with malformed SMB packets.

Microsoft said it may patch the problem, but didn't spell out a timetable or commit to an out-of-cycle update before the next regularly-scheduled Patch Tuesday of Dec. 8. Instead, the company suggested users block TCP ports 139 and 445 at the firewall. Doing so, however, would disable a host of critical services, including network file-sharing and IT group policies.

Gaffie's vulnerability was the first zero-day reported and confirmed by Microsoft in Windows 7 since the new operating system went on sale Oct. 22.
Logged

        
Pages: [1]
Print
Jump to:  

Motorola Droid/Milestone (Full Body)




Forum by Motorola Droid Forum Powered by SMF 1.1.11 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines LLC Motorola Droid Forum | Sitemap



Google visited last this page July 10, 2010, 06:57:30 AM