Zero-day attack hits Word
By Joris Evers on 16 February 2007
A new, yet-to-be-patched security hole in Word is being used in targeted cyberattacks, Microsoft has warned.
When a user opens a rigged Word file, it may corrupt system memory in such a way that an attacker could gain complete control over the PC, Microsoft said in a security advisory posted late Wednesday. Office 2000 and Office XP are at risk, the company said. The two recent versions, Office 2003 and 2007, are not affected.
As with most of the Office vulnerabilities, an attacker would have to trick a user into opening a malicious file to be successful. The vulnerability is being exploited in "very limited, targeted attacks," Microsoft said. A security update to repair the problem is in the works, it added.
Word of the new flaw comes a day after Microsoft released updates for nine other Office-related vulnerabilities. Five of them were zero-day flaws, or security holes that have been publicly disclosed but not fixed.
Security experts have said that limited-scale attacks are the most dangerous. Widespread worms, viruses or Trojan horses sent to millions of mailboxes are typically not a grave concern, because they can be blocked. But targeted Trojan horses, especially those aimed at specific businesses, have become nightmares as they can fly under the radar.
Cybercrooks have found that they can take advantage of Microsoft's security update cycle by timing new attacks right before or just after "Patch Tuesday" -- the second Tuesday of each month when the software maker releases its fixes. Some security watchers have coined the term "zero-day Wednesday" to describe that strategy.
Topics: zero-day, flaw, word, cyberattack, worm, trojan horse, virus, office, microsoft, attack
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Comments (3)
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Promythyus commented on 18/02/2007 01:52 Report abuse
because is was started on "Zero-Day Wednesday, the day AFTER Microshit send out their fornightly patch, on tuesdat, therefore getting 2 weeks immunity from MS patches
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Comment made on: commented on 17/02/2007 16:34 Report abuse
Yeah, why is it called a "Zero-day attack"?
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┼ commented on 17/02/2007 15:33 Report abuse
y is it zero-day?
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