Symantec warns QuickTime users under attack
Attackers are trying to exploit an unpatched vulnerability in Apple's QuickTime software that could let them run code on a victim's computer, Symantec warned in a DeepSight Threat Management System alert issued Sunday.
First observed on Saturday, the attacks appear to be aimed at Windows users, but Mac OS users could also be at risk since the QuickTime vulnerability in question affects both operating systems, the alert said. That vulnerability, called the Apple QuickTime RTSP Response Header Stack-Based Buffer Overflow Vulnerability, was first disclosed on 23 November and remains unpatched by Apple.
Researchers have shown that the QuickTime vulnerability affects a range of operating systems, including Windows XP, Windows Vista, MacOS X 10.4, and the recently released MacOS X 10.5. The vulnerability can be exploited through Internet Explorer, Firefox, Opera, and Safari.
There are two types of attacks underway, Symantec said. In the first, victims' computers are being redirected from an adult website, Ourvoyeur.net, to another site that infects the computer with an application called loader.exe, which can be saved to the computer as metasploit.exe, asasa.exe, or syst.exe. Once installed on a computer this application downloads another binary file, which Symantec identified as Hacktool.Rootkit, a set of tools that can be used to break into a system.
Symantec said it was possible attackers had managed to compromise Ourvoyeur.net as part of the attack.
The second attack also involves redirection, and Symantec is currently investigating the attack to determine what if any malicious code is involved.
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