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View Full Version : Flaws Are Detected in Microsoft’s Vista


Anusha
12-25-2006, 06:19 PM
Source: The Newyork Times

SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 24 — Microsoft is facing an early crisis of confidence in the quality of its Windows Vista operating system as computer security researchers and hackers have begun to find potentially serious flaws in the system that was released to corporate customers late last month.

On Dec. 15, a Russian programmer posted a description of a flaw that makes it possible to increase a user’s privileges on all of the company’s recent operating systems, including Vista. And over the weekend a Silicon Valley computer security firm said it had notified Microsoft that it had also found that flaw, as well as five other vulnerabilities, including one serious error in the software code underlying the company’s new Internet Explorer 7 browser.

The browser flaw is particularly troubling because it potentially means that Web users could become infected with malicious software simply by visiting a booby-trapped site. That would make it possible for an attacker to inject rogue software into the Vista-based computer, according to executives at Determina, a company based in Redwood City, Calif., that sells software intended to protect against operating system and other vulnerabilities.

Determina is part of a small industry of companies that routinely pore over the technical details of software applications and operating systems looking for flaws. When flaws in Microsoft products are found they are reported to the software maker, which then produces fixes called patches. Microsoft has built technology into its recent operating systems that makes it possible for the company to fix its software automatically via the Internet.

Despite Microsoft assertions about the improved reliability of Vista, many in the industry are taking a wait-and-see approach. Microsoft’s previous operating system, Windows XP, required two “service packs” issued over a number of years to substantially improve security, and new flaws are still routinely discovered by outside researchers.

On Friday, a Microsoft executive posted a comment on a company security information Web site stating the company was “closely monitoring” the vulnerability described by the Russian Web site. It permits the privileges of a standard user account in Vista and other versions of Windows to be increased, permitting control of all of the operations of the computer. In Unix and modern Windows systems, users are restricted in the functions they can perform, and complete power is restricted to certain administrative accounts.

“Currently we have not observed any public exploitation or attack activity regarding this issue,” wrote Mike Reavey, operations manager of the Microsoft Security Response Center. “While I know this is a vulnerability that impacts Windows Vista, I still have every confidence that Windows Vista is our most secure platform to date.”

On Saturday, Nicole Miller, a Microsoft spokeswoman, said the company was also investigating the reported browser flaw and that it was not aware of any attacks attempting to use the vulnerability.

Microsoft has spent millions branding the Vista operating system as the most secure product it has produced, and it is counting on Vista to help turn the tide against a wave of software attacks now plaguing Windows-based computers.

Vista is critical to Microsoft’s reputation. Despite an almost four-and-half-year campaign on the part of the company, and the best efforts of the computer security industry, the threat from harmful computer software continues to grow. Criminal attacks now range from programs that steal information from home and corporate PCs to growing armies of slave computers that are wreaking havoc on the commercial Internet.

Although Vista, which will be available on consumer PCs early next year, has been extensively tested, it is only now being exposed to the challenges of the open Internet.

“I don’t think people should become complacent,” said Nand Mulchandani, a vice president at Determina. “When vendors say a program has been completely rewritten, it doesn’t mean that it’s more secure from the get-go. My expectation is we will see a whole rash of Vista bugs show up in six months or a year.”

The Determina executives said that by itself, the browser flaw that was reported to Microsoft could permit damage like the theft of password information and the attack of other computers.

However, one of the principal security advances of Internet Explorer 7 is a software “sandbox” that is intended to limit damage even if a malicious program is able to subvert the operation of the browser. That should limit the ability of any attacker to reach other parts of the Vista operating system, or to overwrite files.

However, when coupled with the ability of the first flaw that permits the change in account privileges, it might then be possible to circumvent the sandbox controls, said Alexander Sotirov, a Determina security researcher. In that case it would make it possible to alter files and potentially permanently infect a target computer. This kind of attack has yet to be proved, he acknowledged.

The Determina researchers said they had notified Microsoft of four other flaws they had discovered, including a bug that would make it possible for an attacker to repeatedly disable a Microsoft Exchange mail server simply by sending the program an infected e-mail message.

Last week, the chief technology officer of Trend Micro, a computer security firm in Tokyo, told several computer news Web sites that he had discovered an offer on an underground computer discussion forum to sell information about a security flaw in Windows Vista for $50,000. Over the weekend a spokesman for Trend Micro said that the company had not obtained the information, and as a result could not confirm the authenticity of the offer.

Many computer security companies say that there is a lively underground market for information that would permit attackers to break in to systems via the Internet.

Nash'
12-25-2006, 06:23 PM
hey anusha...thanks 4 da information.... but i dnt knida understand much of it!!!......cz am nt much interested in IT stf lik u.......

Anusha
12-25-2006, 06:28 PM
hey anusha...thanks 4 da information.... but i dnt knida understand much of it!!!......cz am nt much interested in IT stf lik u.......

:baffled: You didn't understand much of it? Damn! I thought it was almost in pure English (I mean, not plagued with computer jargon)

amila325
12-25-2006, 06:39 PM
thanx for the info anusha well as i know there r lot of bugs in vista as u mentioned above lets c what will happen

Anusha
12-25-2006, 06:51 PM
thanx for the info anusha well as i know there r lot of bugs in vista as u mentioned above lets c what will happen

There aren't much noticeable bugs in Vista as we had in XP RTM. Besides, few of those issues are related to IE7, which I don't use. The only problem I have right now is the lack of video driver support.

zCexVe
12-25-2006, 07:03 PM
When didnt Microsoft hadnt bugs:confused::confused::confused:
But its gr8 that they even asked hackers about the security threats.Hope a virus will not come out on the release day of vista using its security holes:D:D

Anusha
12-25-2006, 07:24 PM
For a starter, there aren't any software that are free of bugs!!! We don't see any program that goes from version 1.0 to 2.0 without like 1.0.1, 1.1 etc.

Anyway, I haven't had viruses in XP - a trojan here and there when I tried to download cracks. But it's not gonna happen anymore (hopefully).

zCexVe
12-25-2006, 07:57 PM
why?do u have a trojan blocker??

Anusha
12-25-2006, 08:00 PM
why?do u have a trojan blocker??

No. Because I don't search for any more cracks. :yes: :yes:

tckrockz
12-25-2006, 08:20 PM
thanx 4 da info thank god i m bak 2 XP

Anusha
12-25-2006, 08:58 PM
thanx 4 da info thank god i m bak 2 XP

Haha. XP still has more flaws than Vista.

tckrockz
12-25-2006, 09:01 PM
ya itz betr 4 me dan vista in somwayz lyk comparbilty

Anusha
12-25-2006, 09:03 PM
ya itz betr 4 me dan vista in somwayz lyk comparbilty

Is it the Java problems you are talking about?

zCexVe
12-25-2006, 10:44 PM
No. Because I don't search for any more cracks. :yes: :yes:

FOSS and FS :yes: :yes: i'm trying but cant do with some softwares,i'm really addicted to them

Anusha
12-25-2006, 10:51 PM
FOSS and FS :yes: :yes: i'm trying but cant do with some softwares,i'm really addicted to them

Not entirely that reason. :rolleyes:
The torrent sites from which I download software and games have to give the crack and they have to be virus free. So I don't have to search for them on those harmful sites.

sri_lion
12-25-2006, 11:29 PM
SO IT BEGINS!!!!!

zCexVe
12-26-2006, 11:18 PM
what???

pissekdotcoms
12-26-2006, 11:19 PM
den ooka kawadda enne

Anusha
12-27-2006, 05:46 AM
den ooka kawadda enne

January 29th :rolleyes:

sri_lion
12-27-2006, 05:35 PM
what???

Discovering flaws in Windows!!!!:yes: :yes: :yes:

fazaal24
12-27-2006, 05:42 PM
thanks Anush......