September 24, 2008

Mozilla patches 11 bugs in Firefox

More than half of the vulnerabilities patched in Firefox 3.0 were labeled critical; Mozilla also fixed 14 flaws in the older Firefox 2.0.

Mozilla late Tuesday patched 11 vulnerabilities in Firefox 3.0, more than half of them labeled "critical," and fixed 14 flaws in the older Firefox 2.0.

Firefox 3.0.2 quashes six critical bugs, four marked "high," and one pegged as "low" in Mozilla's four-step threat ranking system. Among the most serious were four stability bugs in the browser's graphics rendering, layout and JavaScript engines that can crash the program and might be exploitable with malicious code.

[ Learn how to secure your systems with Roger Grimes' Security Adviser blog and newsletter, both from InfoWorld. ]

"Some of these crashes showed evidence of memory corruption under certain circumstances and we presume that with enough effort at least some of these could be exploited to run arbitrary code," said Mozilla in the accompanying advisory.

Mozilla also updated the older Firefox to 2.0.0.17, patching all but one of the bugs fixed in 3.0.2, but also addressing several issues specific to the aging browser.

It's unclear how many more updates Mozilla will release for Firefox 2.0 -- it doesn't produce them on a set schedule -- because it has already announced it will drop the browser this December. Yesterday, Mozilla continued to urge users to upgrade to Firefox 3.0.

One of the bugs in both Firefox 2.0 and 3.0, although rated only low, was described by Mozilla as a variant of a "click-hijacking" vulnerability first reported in Microsoft's Internet Explorer by Liu Die Yu, a researcher noted for finding flaws in IE. Microsoft first patched the bug in 2003, then patched it again the following year.

A Mozilla developer, Paul Nickerson, was credited with uncovering the Firefox variant, which could be used to force a user to download a file.

Mozilla also addressed several other issues in Firefox with 3.0.2, including several stability problems and a bug that caused browsers with customized toolbars to delete the back and forward buttons.

Because the update was delayed to take into account some last-minute fixes, Mozilla also modified the licensing language in Linux versions to eliminate an end-user licensing agreement (EULA) that open-source advocates and users had objected to. Last week, Mitchell Baker, chairman of the Mozilla Foundation and Mozilla Corp., admitted that prompting Linux users to accept the EULA had been a "giant mistake."

Users can download the update for Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux from the Mozilla site; call up their browser's built-in updater; or wait for the automatic update notification, which typically appears within 24 to 48 hours.

Computerworld is an InfoWorld affiliate.

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