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You are here: Home arrow Ethical Hacking Discussions and Related Certificationsarrow Malwarearrow New Flaws Revealed In QuickTime, Apple Remote Desktop
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May 19, 2013, 09:23:24 AM *
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Author Topic: New Flaws Revealed In QuickTime, Apple Remote Desktop  (Read 3912 times)
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don
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« on: September 19, 2008, 11:34:18 AM »

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Hot on the heels of Apple patching 9 vulnerabilities in QuickTime an exploit has been released for a previously unknown vulnerability in the program that affects the new, patched version. The problem appears to be in the processing of the "<? quicktime type= ?>" parameter. Supplying a type value of an excessive length causes a heap overflow.

The current exploit only crashes the program, but a report by Symantec's DeepSight analysis services says that the form of the exploit suggests that further refinements may cause code execution. More research is needed.

Apple has also released Apple Remote Desktop 3.2.2 to address a vulnerability in it that goes back to OS X 10.3. This vulnerability allows an unprivileged local user to elevate privileges to root. The problem is in the Open Scripting Architecture libraries. Systems that have applied Security Update 2008-005 are not vulnerable.

Symantec is reporting that the flaw is related to a previously-reported privilege escalation bug in the ARDAgent. They say that there is evidence that variants of this attack have been seen in the wild and that it is therefore urgent for users to upgrade their systems.


Original story:
http://blogs.pcmag.com/securitywatch/2008/09/new_flaws_revealed_in_quicktim.php

Don
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« Reply #1 on: September 26, 2008, 10:36:58 PM »

It seems like with Neosploit returning, this may be just fuel to the fire:

Quote
September 25, 2008
Hackers resurrect notorious attack toolkit
By Gregg Keizer, Computerworld, IDG

Neosploit, the notorious hacker exploit kit that some thought had been retired months ago, has not only returned from the dead, but is responsible for a dramatic increase in attacks, a security researcher claimed Thursday.

"Neosploit's back," said Ian Amit, director of security research at Aladdin Knowledge Systems Inc.

The accounts of its demise last summer had been a ruse, he argued. "When you're feeling that kind of heat," Amit said, referring to the attention Neosploit had received from both researchers and authorities, "you want to shake those guys off your back. [The talk about quitting] only helped them go under the radar."

In July researchers at RSA's FraudAction Research Labs said that they had evidence that the creators of Neosploit were abandoning the business. For proof, RSA quoted a going-out-of-business message said to have originated with Neosploit's authors.

Neosploit, which first appeared in 2007, was a follow-on to the earlier MPack, and a contemporary to another infamous exploit kit, WebAttacker. Those kits, Neosploit included, were used by cybercriminals to launch attack code aimed at new vulnerabilities in Windows, Internet Explorer or third-party software such as Apple Inc.'s QuickTime. But Neosploit also boasted features new to the click-to-attack business, including sophisticated statistical analysis and management tools.

However, even RSA didn't expect the Neosploit group to disband. "This isn't necessarily the end of this group," said Sean Brady, an RSA product marketing manager, in July.

Turns out he was right.

A month ago, researchers at Aladdin started to suspect that the Neosploit developers were back in business. Two days ago, they uncovered hard evidence: A server hosted in Argentina, run by a longtime Neosploit customer, that contained Neosploit 3.1. The build was dated Aug. 9, weeks after Neosploit's makers supposedly threw in the towel.

According to Amit, other data on the server showed that it was catering to 20 users, seven of whom he characterized as "very high volume," who were logging thousands of successful exploits each day from their use of Neosploit.

Those 20 criminals, added Amit, had compromised between 200 and 300 Web sites, which in turn were being used to serve up exploits from Neosploit to any visitor running a system that had not been fully patched. He found evidence of more than a quarter-million successful attacks against PCs carried out by those sites.

"Neosploit's sole purpose is to deliver malicious code to browsers," Amit said, noting that site hacking isn't part of the kit's jobs. Instead, criminals compromise sites through other vulnerabilities or by gaming the site's administrative password. Only then do they modify the hacked site with attack code from Neosploit.

The kit also acts as a back-end analyzer and is flush with tools that tell the hackers what exploits are most effective and which browsers are most vulnerable, features that have been significantly enhanced in version 3.1, Amit said.

Another improvement, he added, was in licensing. "The main change I've noticed is that it locks down licensing even further. The 'criminal DRM' is even harsher than it was before," Amit said, adding that Neosploit had become so successful that it had been copied and pirated by criminals who didn't want to pay for the software. The licensing modifications, which include tying the username and password of a paying account to a specific IP address, is the group's reaction to that theft.

Neosploit's return, Amit said, coincides with a recent, rapid rise in the number of attacks targeting vulnerabilities in Adobe PDF (portable document format) files. Although other researchers those at Secure Computing Corp., for example have speculated that the increase is due to a new PDF-only attack kit dubbed "PDF Xploit Pack" Amit said the data dug out of the Argentinean server says otherwise.

"Now that we know Neosploit's back, we can try to correlate that with attacks in the last three to four months," Amit said. "The rise in the number of PDF exploits can definitely be linked to Neosploit 3.1." According to the data on the server, the PDF exploit Neosploit serves up is, by far, the most effective and efficient of those currently included with the kit. Neosploit 3.1 also tries other exploits, including ones aimed at QuickTime and Windows Media Player.

"We see one of these other kits [like PDT Xploit Pack] pop up once or twice a month, but they don't really catch on," Amit claimed.

Aladdin is working with both local and international law enforcement agencies to try to track the criminals using Neosploit, and shutter their servers, Amit said. He's been working with US-CERT, a cybercrime and vulnerability clearing house that's part of the Department of Homeland Security, for instance.

"Neosploit's out there and alive," he said. "As long as there's a demand for these tools, they're going to supply them."


Original Story:
http://www.nytimes.com/idg/IDG_852573C400693880002574CF0063FB7A.html?ref=technology&pagewanted=print
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