There was not a lot of details in your post, so I will try to verify and clarify your 
findings. First things first, this is not a problem with Microsofts Internet Explorer, 
but with Macromedia and their Flash player.

I could reproduce this issue successfully with a fresh install of the latest Flash 
player, version 6.0.65.0, on fully patched versions of both IE6SP1 and Windows XP Pro.

There are two completely new issues at hand here.

The first issue is that Macromedia Flash allows you to store arbitrary content in a 
known location, that is %APPDATA%\Macromedia\Flash 
Player\YOURDOMAINNAME.TLD\YOURDOMAINNAME.sol. All flash cookies (which is what you set 
in your example, not browser cookies) from YOURDOMAINNAME.TLD are stored in this file.

The issue is caused by Macromedias decision to store the contents of your Flash cookie 
in plaintext in this .SOL file. When IE later reads the file the "magic filetype" 
feature of Explorer reads the first 256 bytes, finds HTML content and determines to 
render the file as HTML since the target application is the browser, including your 
scripting.

Being able to store arbitrary content in a known location is vital to any of the 
current range of IE exploits.

Flash itself is a binary format, so this complete issue can easily be fixed by 
Macromedia by applying the same level of binary formatting to its Flash cookie 
contents, to provide slight obfuscation of the contents of Flash cookies when storing 
them on disk so Explorer does not misread its datatype.

End-users can protect themselves against this exploit by changing how much data Flash 
applications are allowed to store on disk by going to 
http://www.macromedia.com/support/flashplayer/help/settings/global_storage.html and 
moving the slider all the way down, equivelant to checking the "Never Ask Again" 
checkbox on the page. When an updated version of the Flash player that fixes this is 
available, it is equally easy to change the setting back.

System administrators can edit the file %APPDATA%\Macromedia\Flash 
Player\maromedia.com\support\sys\settings.sol and change the bytes at positions c7 and 
c8 to contain BF and F0, respectively (ASCII � and �), to restrict data storage for 
Flash applications as an end-user would above. If you want to restore the file to 
default settings (for storing 100KB data) change the bytes back to 40 and 59, 
respectively (ASCII @ and Y).

This is also why several people have said they could not reproduce the issue. They 
were either not logged in with the Administrator account, which your POC required, or 
they did not have the Macromedia Flash player installed.

A similar issue was found way back with ID3 tags in Winamp and RealPlayer media files, 
and has been found on several occasions where a third-party non-Microsoft application 
allows you to store arbitrary content in a known location.


The second issue is that IE lets you redirect to local files. This was restricted in 
IE6 SP1. While going over the source code in your POC, we discovered that it 
inadvertently redirects to a local file, despite the apparent restriction.

When IE encounters a redirect such as the following

Content-Location: file://c:/somefile.html

it will disallow the action and not follow the redirect. However, your POC has one 
important alteration, which is the following

Content-Location: file:///c:/somefile.html

Did you notice that slight difference? Adding another slash to the URL circumvents the 
initial restriction, and when IE finally decides to load the URL in another part of 
its code it removes any excess slashes and properly loads file://c:/somefile.html

The restriction imposed by IE6 SP1 is imposed on all local protocols, such as file:// 
and res://, and this new way to circumvent it equally applies to all local protocols. 
This means that you don't have to know the location of a specific file, but instead 
can open a ressource file available on all systems, such as

Content-Location: res:///browselc.dll/mb404.htm

Of course, since you could not inject any code in the ressource file you will now have 
to use another cross-domain scripting vulnerability in place of the Macromedia Flash 
vulnerability you identified in the first issue. On the positive side, it also means 
that you no longer have to guess the users Windows Logon name.


In summary, when Macromedia changes their Flash player to no longer store Flash 
cookies in plaintext in a known location, this will no longer be an issue. All of the 
currently unpatched cross-domain scripting vulnerabilities are having patches 
produced, and since they have no easy POC exploits I doubt we will see any malicious 
use of the local file redirection variation you found.



Regards
Thor Larholm
PivX Solutions, LLC - Senior Security Researcher
http://pivx.com/larholm/ - Get our research, join our mailinglist



-----Original Message-----
From: Mindwarper * [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, October 24, 2003 6:53 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Internet Explorer and Opera local zone restriction bypass

<snip http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/1/342317/2003-10-22/2003-10-28/0>

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