Adobe Flash suffers from 'critical' new zero-day hack

updated 07:25 am EDT, Tue March 15, 2011  Patch inbound for affected platform, 
eventually 

http://www.electronista.com/articles/11/03/15/patch.inbound.for.affected.platform.eventually/

Adobe has published another security advisory after the discovery of a 
“critical vulnerability” in Adobe Flash Player 10.2.152.33 and earlier versions 
across all major platforms including Windows, Macintosh, Linux, Solaris and 
Android mobile devices. According to Adobe, the Zero-Day exploit is being 
deployed in the wild in “targeted attacks” through a Flash (.swf) file embedded 
in a Microsoft Excel file delivered as an email attachment. Adobe reports that 
it is “finalizing a fix for the issue,” but does not expect to have the hole 
patched until the “week of March 21.”

Adobe explains that the exploit can cause a system crash followed by the 
attacker taking control of compromised systems remotely. In the meantime, users 
should exercise extreme caution when receiving emails with any type of Flash 
file embedded within it. Given the popularity of the Flash platform, it would 
seem that this could be a somewhat difficult situation to manage.

Unlike Android devices, Apple’s iOS devices continue to eschew Flash, and are 
among the few devices immune from this latest security flaw. Apple also 
recently took the step of removing Flash as a standard install on some of its 
notebook lines. Steve Jobs has been publicly critical of security 
vulnerabilities in Flash as well as stability issues with the plug-in. He has 
also been critical of the length of time that Adobe has taken to issue patches 
to correct these types of issues. [via Yahoo!]
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