PDA

View Full Version : WINDOWS ALERT! (virus through jpegs)


timmyquest
14th of September 2004 (Tue), 21:56
I figured this is something most of us would worry about :shock:

Major graphics flaw threatens Windows PCs
Published: September 14, 2004, 1:24 PM PDT
By Robert Lemos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com


Microsoft published on Tuesday a patch for a major security flaw in its software's handling of the JPEG graphics format and urged customers to use a new tool to locate the many applications that are vulnerable.

The critical flaw has to do with how Microsoft's operating systems and other software process the widely used JPEG image format and could let attackers create an image file that would run a malicious program on a victim's computer as soon as the file is viewed. Because the software giant's Internet Explorer browser is vulnerable, Windows users could fall prey to an attack just by visiting a Web site that has affected images.

The severity of the flaw had some security experts worried that a virus that exploits the issue may be on the way.

"The potential is very high for an attack," said Craig Schmugar, virus research manager for security software company McAfee. "But that said, we haven't seen any proof-of-concept code yet." Such code illustrates how to abuse flaws and generally appears soon after a software maker publishes a patch for one of its products.

The flaw affects various versions of at least a dozen Microsoft software applications and operating systems, including Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, Office XP, Office 2003, Internet Explorer 6 Service Pack 1, Project, Visio, Picture It and Digital Image Pro. The software giant has a full list of affected applications in the advisory on its Web site. Windows XP Service Pack 2, which is still being distributed to many customers' computers, is not vulnerable to the flaw.

"The challenge is that (the flawed function) ships with a variety of products," said Stephen Toulouse, security program manager for Microsoft's incident response center.

Because so many applications are affected, Microsoft had to create a separate tool to help customers update their computers. Users of Windows Update will also be directed to the software giant's Office Update tool and then to the tool that will find and update imaging and development applications. The tools are a preview of what may come from the company in the future, Toulouse said.

"We know one of the most important things that we hear from customers is to make the software update process easier," he said. "A goal of a unified update mechanism is what we are looking at."

Out of necessity, Linux distributions have already developed such unified update software, which not only updates the core operating system but also other applications created by the open-source community. The majority of Windows applications, however, are created by companies other than Microsoft, making such a unified update system more politically difficult to create.

The JPEG processing flaw enables a program hidden in an image file to execute on a victim's system. The flaw is unrelated to another image vulnerability found in early August. That vulnerability, in a common code library designed to support the Portable Network Graphics, or PNG, format, affected applications running on Linux, Windows and Apple's Mac OS X. Both the JPEG, which stands for Joint Photographic Experts Group, and PNG formats are commonly used by Web sites.

As part of a notification program that has been in place since April 2004, any customer that had signed a nondisclosure agreement with Microsoft received a three-day advance warning about the JPEG flaw.

"Some customers wanted to get more information, for planning purposes," Toulouse said, responding to media reports that premium customers were getting advanced notice of security issues. He directed interested customers to their Microsoft sales representative to get more information on the program. The information given to participants in the program is limited to the number of flaws, the applications affected and the maximum threat level assigned to the flaws.

The JPEG image-processing vulnerability is the latest flaw from Microsoft and the source of the company's 28th advisory this year. Microsoft frequently includes multiple issues in a single advisory; four advisories in April, for example, contained more than 20 vulnerabilities.

A second patch released by Microsoft on Tuesday fixes a flaw in the WordPerfect file converter in Microsoft Office, Publisher, Word and Works. That flaw is rated "important," Microsoft's second-highest threat level, just below "critical." The vulnerability would let an attacker take control of the victim's PC, if that user opened a malicious WordPerfect document.

More information on the second flaw can be found in the advisory on Microsoft's Web site. The software giant recommends that customers use Office Update to download the fix.

Belmondo
14th of September 2004 (Tue), 22:05
Interesting. Thanks for that. :!:

Conk
14th of September 2004 (Tue), 23:47
Thanks Tim. We'll have to keep an ear open for more on this issue.

c0ntr0lz
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 01:00
thanks for passing it about.
updating pc now

CyberDyneSystems
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 11:17
Wow,.. nasty one. Thanks.

stopbath
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 11:19
What ? No JPeg sample?

Thanks for the heads up. :shock:

tommykjensen
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 11:19
Yep, just updated my server and 2 workstations. It turned out that the tool did not find any applications on any of my machines that are voulnarable to the GDI flaw.

tommykjensen
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 11:21
CDS perhaps it would be a good idea to make this a sticky since we all really rely heavily on the JPEG format so it is important that everybody updates their computers so they don't inadvertently infect the rest of us.

RinkRat
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 12:44
TQ,

I thought it was a joke at first, but I got my Security Bulletin from Microsoft today. Wow, just wow.

http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=34846

timmyquest
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 12:48
TQ,

I thought it was a joke at first, but I got my Security Bulletin from Microsoft today. Wow, just wow.

http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=34846

I wouldnt joke about something like this nor would i post it without researching it ;-).

RinkRat
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 12:54
TQ,

I thought it was a joke at first, but I got my Security Bulletin from Microsoft today. Wow, just wow.

http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=34846

I wouldnt joke about something like this nor would i post it without researching it ;-).

It just seemed too outlandish to believe. The article just painted them as the big evil empire, which they are, but usually those types of articles turn out to be fake.

Thanks for alerting everyone.

timmyquest
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 13:58
It just seemed too outlandish to believe.


Yeah i know what ya mean.

Belmondo
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 14:01
Solve the problem: Shoot RAW.

tommykjensen
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 14:07
Solve the problem: Shoot RAW.


Well You can't display that on web :wink:

timmyquest
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 14:16
Solve the problem: Shoot RAW.'

Say, what happens if you have some jpegs on your card, plugged into your computer, they get infected somehow and go into your camera :shock:

:? :)

*say...i wonder i that is possible...?

robertwgross
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 14:18
The virus attacks Windows XP.

Your camera does not have an operating system of Windows XP.

---Bob Gross---

sGu
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 14:29
good thing i'm using Mac, no need to worry for virus at all :D

Scottes
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 14:31
I have about a hundred smart-aleck replies to that, but won't continue a Religious War....

MediaMagic
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 22:19
good thing i'm using Mac, no need to worry for virus at all :D

yeah, but that's just because there's only three of you. You'd easily narrow down the source! :wink:
:D

DocFrankenstein
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 23:02
What if I don't use the internet explorer? :?

timmyquest
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 23:10
What if I don't use the internet explorer? :?

A friend of mine on another board had this to say

Firefox/Mozilla users

There's an exploit discovered for them, much like the JPEG vulnerability found in IE. Luckily, the fix is painless.

Head to http://www.mozilla.org, grab the latest version of the browser you're using and install it. All shortcuts, cookies, history, etc are saved. Took me about 2 minutes to upgrade.
_________________

tommykjensen
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 23:16
What if I don't use the internet explorer? :?

A friend of mine on another board had this to say

Firefox/Mozilla users

There's an exploit discovered for them, much like the JPEG vulnerability found in IE. Luckily, the fix is painless.

Head to http://www.mozilla.org, grab the latest version of the browser you're using and install it. All shortcuts, cookies, history, etc are saved. Took me about 2 minutes to upgrade.
_________________

Well that might be true but I would run the tool MS have created that checks if You have vilnarable tolls installed. It affects other applications than IE.

timmyquest
15th of September 2004 (Wed), 23:19
What if I don't use the internet explorer? :?

A friend of mine on another board had this to say

Firefox/Mozilla users

There's an exploit discovered for them, much like the JPEG vulnerability found in IE. Luckily, the fix is painless.

Head to http://www.mozilla.org, grab the latest version of the browser you're using and install it. All shortcuts, cookies, history, etc are saved. Took me about 2 minutes to upgrade.
_________________

Well that might be true but I would run the tool MS have created that checks if You have vilnarable tolls installed. It affects other applications than IE.

I agree...

sdommin
16th of September 2004 (Thu), 15:30
If you get SP2, you won't have the problem.

DocFrankenstein
16th of September 2004 (Thu), 20:01
If you get SP2, you won't have the problem.
What's SP2? :?

Belmondo
16th of September 2004 (Thu), 20:07
What's SP2? :?

THat's Service Pack 2, the recently released update to Windows XP. (free from Microsoft)