[ISN] Microsoft patches three critical security problems

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Wed Nov 12 2003 - 04:16:19 PST

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    http://www.nwfusion.com/news/2003/1111mspatch.html
    
    By Paul Roberts
    IDG News Service
    11/11/03
    
    Microsoft released the second installment of its now monthly security
    bulletins, patching three software holes in Windows systems that it
    said were "critical" security risks and a fourth problem with
    Microsoft Office that the company rated "important."
    
    Taken together, the security holes could allow attackers to set up Web
    pages to take advantage of vulnerable systems and read files or run
    attack code on a remote user's Windows machine, Microsoft said.
    
    One bulletin, MS03-049, affects Windows 2000 and Windows XP
    workstations and fixes a critical buffer overrun vulnerability in a
    Windows service called the Workstation Service, which manages requests
    for files or printing services on a LAN. That service is turned "on"  
    by default in Windows and could be compromised by an attacker using an
    improperly formatted network message that was sent to a vulnerable
    machine.
    
    A second bulletin, MS03-051, patches two critical problems that were
    discovered in Microsoft's FrontPage Server Extensions, which are
    installed by default with the Internet Information Services (IIS) on
    certain versions of Windows 2000 and allows technical staff to create,
    manage and add features to Web pages.
    
    Microsoft said that it fixed a buffer overrun in the FrontPage Server
    Extensions that could enable an attacker to place and run attack code
    on a vulnerable machine, as well as a flaw in the way that a component
    called SmartHTML interpreter works that made it vulnerable to
    denial-of-service attacks.
    
    The Redmond, Wash., company also issued a new cumulative security
    patch, MS03-048, for the Internet Explorer (IE) Web browser. The new
    patch updates previous cumulative patches for IE and sews up five new
    vulnerabilities in the product, including a problem with the browser's
    cross domain security model, which governs how different Web sites
    share information and interact with the Windows operating system.
    
    The fourth patch, MS03-050, fixes a security hole in some versions of
    Microsoft's Excel spreadsheet and Word word processing products that
    could enable an attacker to embed an attack in a small program known
    as a macro. Machines running vulnerable versions of those products
    could have malicious code placed and run on their Windows system after
    opening an infected spreadsheet or Word document, Microsoft said.
    
    While all the security holes disclosed by Microsoft deserve prompt
    attention from network administrators, the Workstation Service and
    FrontPage Server Extensions vulnerabilities are particularly serious,
    according to Vincent Gullotto, vice president of McAfee AVERT at
    Network Associates.
    
    The problem with the Workstation Service that Microsoft identifies in
    MS03-049 could be particularly troublesome for network administrators,
    because it affects every Windows 2000 and Windows XP machine, rather
    than less-plentiful servers, and because the vulnerability could allow
    attackers to launch their attack without any user interaction,
    Gullotto said.
    
    MS03-051 is also dangerous, given the widespread use of Internet
    Information Server and the ability of attackers to remotely exploit
    the security hole and compromise vulnerable machines, he said.
    
    Although Microsoft did not rate the Microsoft Office security hole
    critical, that too could be an attractive target for attackers,
    Gullotto said.
    
    Attacks that use macros are less common than they used to be, he said.  
    However a vulnerability such as the one disclosed in MS03-050 that
    allows remote code execution and the rich supply of systems running
    affected versions of Microsoft Excel and Microsoft Word could prompt
    hackers to write proof-of-concept code for the vulnerability that
    could then be used in attacks, Gullotto said.
    
    Microsoft only last month switched to a system of releasing monthly
    security bulletins, replacing a system of weekly security updates.
    
    The company made the change in response to complaints from Microsoft
    customers about the difficulty of staying on top of the weekly
    releases, Microsoft said.
    
    Microsoft said it reserves the right to release bulletins at any time,
    however, and will do so when it feels customers are in imminent danger
    of being attacked because of a known software vulnerability.
    
    
    
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