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Sunday | 23 November, 2008
CIO
Zero-Day Malware Attacks You Can't Block
Here's what you should know about zero-day hazards and the security holes they exploit
Ryan Singel (PC World) 28 February, 2007 15:00:34

Targeted Office attacks

Unlike the most dangerous of the IE-targeted zero-day threats, those directed against Word and other Office apps can't employ drive-by downloads. Instead, they typically rely on getting a victim to double-click an e-mail attachment--and when they are paired with orchestrated attacks against particular companies, even wary users can accidentally click.

By sending the employees of a targeted firm a faked (or "spoofed") e-mail message that appears to come from a coworker or other source within the company, a malicious hacker has a much better chance of persuading recipients to open an attached Word document than if the message appeared to come from a random sender.

In mid-December, Microsoft confirmed that Word contained two such vulnerabilities that crackers exploited to launch "very limited and targeted attacks," following manipulation of a string of similar flaws in Excel and PowerPoint. The company now warns users to be wary not only of e-mail attachments in messages from unknown senders, but also of unsolicited attachments from known senders.

Microsoft products may be the most popular zero-day targets, but other common software has provided equally dangerous avenues of attack. In January a researcher announced discovery of a flaw in QuickTime's handling of streaming video that would have allowed an attacker to effectively commandeer a victim's computer. In late November 2006 a zero-day vulnerability in the Adobe ActiveX browser control introduced a similar risk.

The rise in zero-day incidents mirrors a major increase in the annual number of reported software vulnerabilities. In 2006 software makers and researchers catalogued some 7247 vulnerabilities; that's 39 percent more than in 2005, according to Internet Security Systems Xforce.

Most of these bugs don't lead to a zero-day exploit, however. Software companies often receive reports of bugs and crashes from their users, leading to discovery of security holes, which the companies then patch before any attacker can exploit them. When outside security researchers discover a flaw, they (for the most part, anyway) adhere to a set of practices, known as "ethical disclosure," specifically designed to avoid zero-day attacks.

Under ethical disclosure, researchers first contact the software vendor confidentially to report their findings. The company doesn't announce the problem until it has a patch ready, at which time it publicly credits the original researchers with having uncovered the flaw.

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