Microsoft Warns of 'Critical' Security Flaws in Windows
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2004
WASHINGTON Microsoft Corp. warned customers Tuesday about
unusually serious security problems with its Windows software that
could let hackers quietly break into their computers to steal
files, delete data or eavesdrop on sensitive information.
Microsoft, which learned about the flaws more than six months
ago from researchers, said the only protective solution was to
apply a repairing patch it offered on its Web site. It assessed the
threat to computer users as "critical," its highest rating.
A Microsoft security executive, Stephen Toulouse, said the
flawed software was "an extremely deep and pervasive technology in
Windows," and urged customers to apply the patch immediately.
The disclosure comes just weeks before Microsoft Chairman Bill
Gates delivers a keynote speech in San Francisco at one of the
industry's most important security trade conferences. Microsoft has
struggled in recent months against a tide of renewed criticism
about security risks in its software, the engine for computers in
most of the world's governments, corporations and homes.
"This is one of the most serious Microsoft vulnerabilities ever
released," said Marc Maiffret of eEye Digital Security Inc. of
Aliso Viejo, Calif., which discovered the new flaws in Windows. "The
breadth of systems affected is probably the largest ever. This is
something that will let you get into Internet servers, internal
networks, pretty much any system."
Maiffret said some computer systems that control critically
important power or water utilities were vulnerable.
Maiffret predicted hackers would try to unleash a damaging
Internet infection within weeks. Unlike earlier vulnerabilities
that spawned such attacks, hackers can exploit the newly disclosed
flaws to break into susceptible computers using dozens of methods,
making any defense far more difficult.
"The race will be on," agreed Marcus Sachs, a former White
House adviser on cybersecurity.
Cover-up
Researchers at eEye discovered the problems last July and agreed
to keep quiet about them until Microsoft could fix them. Maiffret
complained that the delay between eEye's discovery and Tuesday's
public disclosure by Microsoft was "just totally unacceptable"
because Windows users were broadly vulnerable during the period.
Toulouse said Microsoft took months because it wanted to ensure
that a single repairing patch solved any related problems. "We
really took the steps to make sure our investigation was as broad
and deep as possible," he said.
Maiffret and Microsoft said they were unaware anyone had yet
attacked Windows computers using the technique, although eEye had
successfully tested the method to break into its own computers.
Microsoft's disclosure occur just days before a presidential
advisory council submits recommendations to the White House about
ways technology companies should respond to major software
vulnerabilities that could affect national security. The 54-page
report, obtained by The Associated Press, cautions that "long
delays in remediation can result in prolonged risk to end users."
The problems affected a technology in the newest versions of
Windows known as "abstract syntax notation," a way to share data
across different computers. Some of Microsoft's built-in security
features, such as its Kerberos cryptography system, rely on the
flawed software.
Microsoft urged consumers to apply the repairing patch
immediately if they were using Windows NT, Windows 2000 or Windows
XP versions of its software, or its Windows NT Server, Server 2000
and Server 2003 software commonly found in corporations.
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