search technology reviews, news, features, group tests
Popular Searches:   video , free , windows
 |  Register
 |  Newsletters  | 
Sitemap  |  RSS
RSS
Thursday November 26, 2009 11:36 PM AEST
Skip Navigation LinksPC Authority > News > Steve Wozniak predicts death of the iPod
NEWS

Microsoft comes clean on URI holes

by Shaun Nichols  on Oct 12, 2007
Tags: Microsoft | comes | clean | on | URI | holes
Company vows to fix address handling flaw.
Microsoft is to issue a fix for a bug in Internet Explorer 7 that leaves users vulnerable to attack.

Members of Microsoft's Secure Windows Initiative team explained the issue in an article posted to a company blog.

The problem exists in IE7's handling of uniform resource indicators (URIs) in Windows XP and Server 2003.

The URI is the first part of an address, used to specify which application runs a file or link. One example is the 'mailto:' command which launches an email client.

After the URI link is clicked, Windows calls a component known as 'ShellExecute' which then runs the URI instructions.

In recent months, researchers have outlined vulnerabilities in Firefox and Internet Explorer that could allow an attacker to execute malicious code and compromise a target system.

Mozilla recently issued an update for Firefox that addresses the issue, and Microsoft is saying it will need to do the same.

Previous versions of Internet Explorer checked the URI within the browser. If an address was malformed or invalid, the process would fail and the URI would not run.

With the new version of the browser, however, a malformed URI is "cleaned up " in order to be run. This, say researchers, allows attackers to run potentially malicious code hidden within the URI.

The Secure Windows Initiative developers said that a security component prevents Windows Vista from running the URI scripts, protecting IE7 from the attack on Vista. No such protections exist Within IE7 on Windows XP and 2003, however.

The developers believe that the ShellExecute component will need to be redesigned in order to be "more strict" in its handling of URLs.

Microsoft gave no expected release date for the update, and recommended that developers take matters into their own hands to secure their applications in the meantime.

Copyright © 2009 v3.co.uk
Email a Friend Email this
Print Page Print this
Tweet This Tweet this
Feedback Send us your tips


Ads by Google

Comments

Be the first to comment on this article.
Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Login or register to submit a comment.
 

Top Stories

Top 10 technology also-rans
From Betamax to Amiga, here's a list of those IT innovations that fell under the bulldozer. Some were cruelly robbed of their advantage, others threw it away with bad management
 
Movie tech: Latest Avatar trailer serves up more on Amp Suits, Aliens style army gear and much more
The latest Avatar trailer takes a closer look at the battle tech behind the film - but we can't help compare it to James Cameron's Aliens in tone and style.
 
Whatever happened to...Video Phones?
Videophones, in one form or another, have been around since the 1920's, with some major attempts to create public videophone booths in the 1930's and 1950's. But why didn't they take off in the modern era?
 


 
Intel
 
Apple Black Friday sale - one day only
 
 
LogMeIn
 
 
Amazing Dell Coupons now available