Hackers find vulnerability that renders Windows Vista's security useless
- added August 09, 2008
- 32 responses
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- enum_Bossman
- added this
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- Windows Vista (18)
Mark Dowd of IBM Internet Security Systems (ISS) and Alexander Sotirov, of VMware Inc. have discovered a technique that can be used to bypass all memory protection safeguards that Microsoft built into Windows Vista. These new methods have been used to get around Vista's Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR), Data Execution Prevention (DEP) and other protections by loading malicious content through an active web browser. The researchers were able to load whatever content they wanted into any location they wished on a user's machine using a variety of objects, such as Java, ActiveX and even .NET objects. This feat was achieved by taking advantage of the way that Internet Explorer (and other browsers) handle active scripting in the Operating System.
While this may seem like any standard security hole, other researchers say that the work is a major breakthrough and there is very little that Microsoft can do to fix the problems. These attacks work differently than other security exploits, as they aren't based on any new Windows vulnerabilities, but instead take advantage of the way Microsoft chose to guard Vista's fundamental architecture. According to Dino Dai Zovi, a popular security researcher, "the genius of this is that it's completely reusable. They have attacks that let them load chosen content to a chosen location with chosen permissions. That's completely game over."
According to Microsoft, many of the defenses added to Windows Vista (and Windows Server 2008) were added to stop all host-based attacks. For example, ASLR is meant to stop attackers from predicting key memory addresses by randomly moving a process' stack, heap and libraries. While this technique is very useful against memory corruption attacks, it would be rendered useless against Dowd and Sotirov's new method. "This stuff just takes a knife to a large part of the security mesh Microsoft built into Vista," said Dai Zovi to SearchSecurity.com. "If you think about the fact that .NET loads DLLs into the browser itself and then Microsoft assumes they're safe because they're .NET objects, you see that Microsoft didn't think about the idea that these could be used as stepping stones for other attacks. This is a real tour de force."
While Microsoft hasn't officially responded to the findings, Mike Reavey, group manager of the Microsoft Security Response Center, said the company has been aware of the research and is very interested to see it once it has been made public. It currently isn't known whether these exploits can be used against older Microsoft Operating Systems, such as Windows XP and Windows Server 2003, but since these techniques do not rely on any one specific vulnerability, Zovi believes that we may suddenly see many similar techniques applied to other platforms or environments. "This is not insanely technical. These two guys are capable of the really low-level technical attacks, but this is simple and reusable," Dai Zovi said. "I definitely think this will get reused soon."
These techniques are being seen as an advance that many in the security community say will have far-reaching implications not only for Microsoft, but also on how the entire technology industry thinks about attacks. Expect to be hearing more about this in the near future and possibly being faced with the prospect of your "secure" server being stripped completely naked of all its protection.
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- enum_Bossman
- 4 months ago
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And thats becuase microsoft doesn think its products through anymore, they only want money
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If anything else in our lives worked as poorly and left us feeling as vulnerable as Windows does, the company would have been out of business long before the issues gt this bad. What gives?
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Time to close the Windows.....
Ride on!
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All operating systems have flaws. Yes, even Macs. Part of the reason more flaws are found in Windows is because far more people have Windows. And there are people who dedicate there time to finding flaws in Windows.
This isn't new. A patch will be made, another flaw will be found, and so on and so on. That's how it works.
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Scary stuff... Glad I don't use Vista on this computer.
I don't know a whole lot about stuff like this, but would a No Script program actually stop this?
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- Ayahuasca2012
- 4 months ago
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Does anyone else feel a bit uneasy right this moment?
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I think the best security is remembering to stay away from shady sites, and to keep what security software you have running.
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- ultravphunter
- 4 months ago
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I thought that Vista had already rendered Vista's security useless.
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- sublimeuniverse
- 4 months ago
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Time to update the aftermarket security software... AGAIN.
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- electricsquiral
- 4 months ago
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exactly the reason i never bought it. if its not better than my windows 2000 or linux computers, i'm not spending money on it
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Yet Microsoft wants to the the OS platform for all our voting machines!
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- BentFranklin
- 4 months ago
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This is yet another blow to Vista, which will have Microsoft cowaring in fear. I for one am going no where near Vista until i'm am certain that there will be no more big problems.
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My Win2000 box is ok my XP box is the same and this linux box is still quite new but I'm gaining new confidence with each new press release.
Debian seems just about perfect from here!
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- AntiFacistCanuck
- 3 months ago
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For those talking about how bad Vista is because of this, that may not be the case. The article says it may affect older versions of Windows such as XP and Server 2003. And theoretically, there's no reason they couldn't apply it to Linux as well. Though, that depends on the specifications of the hack, I guess. This hack is done through a web browser with Java and ActiveX, not just .NET objects. Java is cross-platform.
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- enum_Bossman
- 3 months ago
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Windows will always be full of flaws as long as it closed source. This is the top rated Security program out there and features many features that windows will never give you.
http://www.personalfirewall.comodo.com/
Not to mention it's free and has great support.
And no the hack will not affect Linux, it's a different OS written in a different language than Windows, in fact, the Linux bugs found are a LOT less serious than Windows.....the article would've mentioned Linux if it was the case.
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- Sons_Of_Liberty
- 3 months ago
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vista comes in 32 and 64, on top of that most people use there own virus software bla bla bla. theres people haking into nasa every week whats new!
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Remember the Microsoft mantra ... its not a hole, its a feature.
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- EclecticBadger
- 3 months ago
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I wonder if windows 98 is (just in general) safer these days. . . wouldn't that be ironic?
hmm... now I'm curious if firefox runs on win98.
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What, you mean to tell me that Vista is a garbage program... no!, who would have thunk it.
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... glad I just got a mac
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- samonster34
- 3 months ago
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