http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9174432/Microsoft_patches_10_critical_IE_bugs?source=CTWNLE_nlt_msft_2010-04-01यस्ता
सूचना त सङ्कलन गरेर राख्न सके हुन्थ्यो कि जस्तो लाग्छ। एउटा index-corpus
राख्न पाए  हुन्थ्यो ।Microsoft patches 10 critical IE bugs The fix for IE6
was finished last month, file date stamps show
By Gregg Keizer
March 30, 2010 03:30 PM ET
 Comments
(6)
<http://www.computerworld.com/comments/node/9174432>
Recommended
(8)
<http://www.computerworld.com/comments/anon_vote/node/9174432/1?destination=node/9174432>
Digg
<javascript:void(0);>
Twitter
<javascript:void(0);>
Share/Email
<javascript:void(0);>
   Top Stories


   - Attacks prompted emergency IE update
   
<http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9174620/Attacks_prompted_emergency_IE_update_>
   - Can the iPad beat the hype?
   <http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9174625/Can_the_iPad_beat_the_hype_>
   - Court denies Microsoft's appeal in i4i patent
case<http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9174629/Court_denies_Microsoft_s_appeal_in_i4i_patent_case>
   - DHS studying global response to Conficker
botnet<http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9174628/DHS_studying_global_response_to_Conficker_botnet>
   - Adobe, Foxit examine new no-bug-needed PDF hack
   
<http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9174612/Adobe_Foxit_examine_new_no_bug_needed_PDF_hack_>
   - Google becomes Topeka in April Fool's hoax
   
<http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9174608/Google_becomes_Topeka_in_April_Fool_s_hoax_>






 Computerworld - Microsoft today shipped 2010's second rush update for
Internet Explorer (IE), patching 10 vulnerabilities -- including one hackers
have been exploiting for weeks.

That bug had been reported to Microsoft by a Beijing security company in
mid-November, 2009, Microsoft confirmed, months before news broke that it
was being used by attackers. In fact, Microsoft wrapped up work on the fix
for IE6 by Feb. 26, according to date stamps on the affected file.

The update, tagged
MS10-018<http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/Bulletin/MS10-018.mspx>,
was released two weeks early because Microsoft had tracked a growing number
of attacks against IE6 and IE7. The bug has been used by malicious sites to
launch drive-by attacks for much of the month.

The last emergency IE
update<http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9147058/Microsoft_patches_IE_admits_it_knew_of_bug_last_August>was
issued January 21 to fix eight flaws, including one that had been
exploited to attack
Google<http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9136345/Google_Update>,
Adobe and scores of other companies. Google blamed China for the attacks, a
move that led to its decision to relocate its Chinese-language search engine
to Hong Kong.

All 10 
vulnerabilities<http://www.computerworld.com/s/topic/85/Spam%2C+Malware+and+Vulnerabilities>patched
in today's update -- which was originally slated for release April
13, the next regularly-scheduled Patch Tuesday -- were rated "critical," the
highest level threat in Microsoft's four-step scoring system. But there were
clear differences in the risk profiles of different versions of IE.

IE6, the 2001 browser that many want to see dead and
buried<http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9166638/Mourners_eulogize_IE6_at_funeral_for_aged_browser>,
was affected by eight of the 10 bugs, with seven of those eight marked
critical. IE7, which debuted in 2006 prior to the release of Windows Vista,
contained seven out of the possible 10, with five vulnerabilities tagged
critical. IE8, on the other hand, was touched by just three of the 10, with
only two critical.

"The message today should be to get onto IE8," said Andrew Storms, director
of security operations at nCircle Network Security. "Not just ditch IE6, but
dump IE6 *and* IE7."

For the most part, Storms saw the 10 vulnerabilities as "pretty typical IE
bugs. Except for [CVE-2010-0806], none of them are particularly troublesome,
or no more than we've come to expect." CVE-2010-0806 is the Common
Vulnerabilities & Exposure ID for the vulnerability that prompted the rush,
or "out-of-band," update.

And that vulnerability received most of the attention today from Storms and
other researchers, including HD Moore, the creator of the Metasploit
framework and chief security officer at security company Rapid7, which
manages the open-source Metasploit project.

According to Moore, Microsoft's out-of-band hand was forced when a Taiwanese
researcher nicknamed "Nanika" revamped public exploit code so that it worked
reliably against not only IE6, but also the newer IE7. "Before, Microsoft
said, 'Not that big a deal,' but then the facts changed and they say,
'Sorry, this does affect IE7 reliably.' They changed their mind."

-- 
FOSS Nepal mailing list: [email protected]
http://groups.google.com/group/foss-nepal
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]

Mailing List Guidelines: 
http://wiki.fossnepal.org/index.php?title=Mailing_List_Guidelines
Community website: http://www.fossnepal.org/

To unsubscribe, reply using "remove me" as the subject.

Reply via email to