Weakness in GoldMine(tm) Email Manager allows arbitrary code execution
Systems: GoldMine 5.70 and 6.00 prior to version 30503
Vulnerable: 5.70.11111,5.70.20404,6.00.21021,6.00.30203,6.00.30403
Not Vulnerable: 5.70.30503, 6.00.30503
Severity: Serious
Category: Arbitrary Execution of Code of Hackers Choice
Classification: Input Validation Error
BugTraq-ID: TBA 
CVE-Number: CAN-2003-0241
Remote Exploit: yes
Local Exploit: no
Vendor URL: www.frontrange.com
Author: Michael S. Scheidell, SECNAP Network Security 
Scheduled Release date: May 29th, 2003
Notifications: FrontRange(tm) notified April 27th, 2003, Fix released May 29th, 2003

Discussion: (From FrontRange web site)
Quickly and easily equips professionals, SOHOs (Small Offices/Home Offices), small 
businesses and teams with automated customer/contact management and workgroup tools.

Problem: By sending a specially mal-crafted email to a user who opens it with the 
GoldMine mail agent, a hacker can run arbitrary code of the hackers choice on the 
users computer. This includes remote trojans, irc zombies, spyware, malware, remote 
key loggers, or any program a hackers wants to. This program will be running inside 
the corporate network, behind the firewall and access anything the infected user has 
access to. The GoldMine mail agent does not even run the html email in the 'security 
zone' as does Microsoft(tm) Outlook, but passes anything that looks like HTML to be 
executed unrestricted directly to the default Browser (usually IE). 

User does not even have to open the email, as the default 'preview' option will pass 
the first few lines of the email to IE which will trigger the exploit, in fact, just 
highlighting the email in order to delete it could trigger the exploit.

The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) project has assigned the name 
CAN-2003-0241 <http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CAN-2003-0241> this 
issue. This is a candidate for inclusion in the CVE list (<http://cve.mitre.org>), 
which standardizes names for security problems.

Exploit: No exploit is necessary, as there are already examples in viruses and trojans 
that were designed to attack Microsoft Outlook and Outlook Express. 

Microsoft fixed these by patching both readers and allowing the user to set the 
security zone for reading HTML email in the 'insecure' settings.

To see an exhaustive list of what can happen when email is passed to IE, see 
<http://www.guninski.com/browsers.html>

Vendor Response: FrontRange immediately verified the existence of this vulnerability, 
created a patch and scheduled its release as soon as QA testing was done. FrontRange 
is concerned about it's users security and has issued a patch on May 29th for their 
current 6.0 version, as well as their legacy 5.70 version.

Solution: FrontRange advises its clients that they should upgrade to the latest 
version of GoldMine Business Contact Manager. Please see FrontRange support page for 
more information: <http://support.frontrange.com/>.

SECNAP has tested FrontRange provided solution on 5.70.30503 and it runs HTML through 
IE restricted security zone now, just like outlook and outlook express.  If you still 
fail the test, you need to check the IE restricted security zone settings.

Workaround:
If you cannot upgrade, then you should immediately disable IE as email viewer, in 
"Edit >> Preferences >> Internet >> More Options >> Advanced"

Administrators can change user preferences from "File >> Configure >> User Settings" 
or via editing the users ini files and change [Internet] section EmailReadertype to 1

[Internet]
EmailReaderType=1

To test to see if you are vulnerable, you can send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Note: this test will be discontinued after July 1st, 2003 and is only available to 
GoldMine email).

Michael Scheidell, SECNAP Network Security, www.secnap.net

Credit: 
The original problem with IIE, Microsoft Outlook and Outlook Express was found by 
George Grunski and involved insecure default reading of a malformed HTML Email in 
Outlook and OE and insecure running of HTML (see 
<http://www.guninski.com/browsers.html>). Also, thanks to Jeff Bell, VP Information 
Technology, Zino Mortgage <http://www.zinomortgage.com> and Angel Alexander Maga�a of 
FrontRange for their assistance in verifying the problem.

Original copy of this report can be found here
<http://www.secnap.net/security/gm001.html>

Copyright:
Above Copyright(c) 2003, SECNAP Network Security, LLC. World rights reserved.

This security report can be copied and redistributed electronically provided it is not 
edited and is quoted in its entirety without written consent of SECNAP Network 
Security, LLC. Additional information or
permission may be obtained by contacting SECNAP Network Security at 561-368-9561
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