Microsoft Corp. on Tuesday released seven security patches covering a wide array of the company's products. Two of those patches
fix holes that Microsoft deemed "critical" and warned could allow remote attackers to take control of vulnerable Windows systems.
The software updates include fixes for previously unknown holes in Windows, including critical holes in the Windows Task Manager
and HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) help features. The company also published a patch for a recent, publicly disclosed hole
in the Windows Shell application programming interface (Shell API) and fixed a hole in older versions of the Internet Information
Services (IIS) Web server that one expert said is well-suited for use in an Internet worm.
The seven updates, named MS04-018 through MS04-024, were released in accordance with the company's monthly patching schedule.
At the top of the list were two patches, MS04-022 and MS04-023, that Microsoft said were "critical" and could allow remote
attackers to run malicious code on affected Windows systems, according to the Microsoft Web page. (See: http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/current.aspx.)
MS04-022 fixes a hole in Windows Task Scheduler, a Windows component that lets users schedule commands, programs or computer
scripts to run at a specific time. A buffer overrun vulnerability in the Task Scheduler could allow a malicious hacker to
place and run attack code on the vulnerable system, Microsoft said.
In buffer overrun attacks, malicious hackers purposely fill a buffer, or temporary data store, causing data, including malicious
code written by the attacker, to spill over into other parts of the system's memory. Buffer overrun attacks can be used to
shut down vulnerable systems, corrupt data, alter the way applications run or give attackers control over the systems.
Attackers could embed attacks on the Task Scheduler in a file on a Web page, then trick Windows users into visiting that page.
Alternatively, a Task Scheduler file, called a JOB file, could be tailored to trigger the buffer overrun, Microsoft said.
MS04-023 fixes two more newly discovered critical holes in the Windows HTML help feature. One hole, in a component called
showHelp, fixes an error in the way that Windows processes a type of help file known as a CHM file. If left unfixed, the flaw
could allow a remote attacker to use specially crafted URLs (uniform resource locators) to run attack code on the vulnerable
Windows system. Attackers would have to trick users into clicking on a malicious link, using a specially designed Web page,
or a link embedded in an HTML format e-mail message, Microsoft said.
A second flaw in the way Windows checks data in help files also was patched by MS04-023. That vulnerability could allow an
anonymous user to set up a Web site containing code designed to trigger the vulnerability. Attackers could also embed attack
code in an HTML format e-mail message, Microsoft said.
In addition to those two critical fixes, Microsoft patched four holes rated "important," which indicates that exploitation
could result in the compromising of data, but not the creation of an Internet worm. One of those patches is related to a widespread
Web attack in late June in which hackers modified the configuration of Microsoft IIS Web servers, allowing malicious code
to be appended to every HTML document served by the Web server
On July 2 Microsoft released a software update that disabled a Windows component called ADODB.Stream, which online criminals
were using in the attacks to copy malicious code, known as "Download.Ject" or "Scob," onto Windows users' machines.
In MS04-024, Microsoft patched a hole in the Windows Shell API that could have allowed a remote attacker to take control of
fully patched Windows systems using a slightly modified version of the Download.Ject attacks. The Shell API hole was discovered
by Dutch security expert Jelmer Kuperus, who published the code on the Web earlier this month.
In MS04-021, Microsoft also issued a patch for customers using IIS Version 4.0 and Windows NT 4.0. A buffer overrun flaw fixed
by that patch could allow a remote attacker to take control of a vulnerable system by sending a specially crafted message
to the vulnerable IIS sever, causing it to run the attacker's code, Microsoft said.
Despite being rated "important," rather than critical, by Microsoft, the MS04-021 hole is of particular concern to security
experts at McAfee Inc., according to Vincent Gullotto, vice president of the Anti-Virus Emergency Response Team at McAfee.
Like the vulnerabilities that led to the Blaster and Sasser Internet worms, the IIS 4.0 hole gives malicious hackers total
control over vulnerable servers without requiring them to trick users into clicking on a link or visiting a Web page, he said.
The fact that the vulnerability only affects organizations using Windows NT and IIS 4.0 limits its reach somewhat, but many
companies still use those products and could fall victim to an attack, Gullotto said.
McAfee experts are also concerned about both the showHelp hole plugged by MS04-023 and the Shell API hole fixed by MS04-024.
In both cases, proof of concept code has been released on the Internet that could make it easier for less-sophisticated hackers
to launch attacks targeting the security holes, he said.
"(Proof of concept code) simply increases the risk that it will attract attention from a virus writer, who could create something
quicker. It just ups the ante for a zero day attack," he said.
REFERENCES:
New Microsoft patch doesn't plug all holes, WebWereld Netherlands, Jul. 6, 2004