Spyware Tunnels in on Winamp Flaw
Andy Philips writes "A security bug in Winamp is being exploited by miscreants to install spyware on machines running the media player software.
"After surfing to a malicious Web site on our test machines, the file 'x.pls' begins to download, Almost immediately, Winamp starts to execute the play list and remote code execution begins." Sunbelt's Adam Thomas wrote in a posting. The Winamp problem affects version 5.12 of the media player. Earlier versions may also be affected."
Once upon a time, I used Winamp.
... etc.
... the hot keys may have still been there but what I was looking for in a media player was not. For some reason, they seemed to think that competing with Windows Media Player meant mimicking it to every detail. Fine. I never want to touch Windows Media Player, it's about as useful as my appendix. And now I feel the same way about Winamp.
And it was good.
It was fairly lightweight, I could load in huge playlists of college-napster-garbage without slowdown and I knew all the hot keys for searching and what not.
Then that llama came into the picture. I think it must have been version three or four (I can't remember) when there was a damned llama or alpaca or whatever in a green field. Now, I love llamas and alpacas, don't get me wrong. The problem was that now Winamp was about "graphix" and "features" that were once plugins that I didn't want.
I don't know why they thought Winamp needed to be able to play videos but it did now. I don't know why they thought Winamp had to show stupid tripping-on-acid-harmonograph visualizations but it did now. I don't know why they thought Winamp had to melt songs together but it did now
On top of that, the memory footprint in Windows was crazy. And my roommate tried to put skins on Winamp that just made my computer shit its gourd. I was disgusted
Now there's a spyware flaw in Winamp. Am I surprised? Not really. They have gotten so complicated that there's probably a thousand holes in that application. They definitely lost site of what I was looking for--a plain jane slim audio player. Winamp's executing a remote method invocation through a playlist that can trigger itself to be automatically loaded and ran? Now that sounds like a "feature" I want my audio player to have.
Is this the first time this has happened? Nope, remember the zero day exploit that targeted skins in 2004? There's been a myriad of security issues with Winamp since it became more and more complicated.
"Gee, the way our audio player loads playlists isn't very secure. But it works and the people who use our application aren't interested in security--they're interested in playing AVI files on their audio player!"
So what would I recommend? Well, if you're using Linux, I can think of at least ten things better but XMMS would probably be my favorite. If you're running Windows, I like to use Quintessential Player which can be modified to be as complicated as new Winamp or can be
My work here is dung.
I was wondering why my mp3-collection was suddenly trying to sell me penis-lengthening pills!
...whips your computer's ass, as well as the llama's.
Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
Link to WinAmp Free Player.
Because there is nothing wrong with fucking up your own computer.
There is nothing wrong with telling people how to fuck up their computers as well.
There is however something wrong if you use these tools to automatically fuck up other peoples computers.
liqbase
I know you will all correct me if I'm wrong, but if you don't have the .pls as a trigger for Winamp as a plugin, you're not vulnerable. Just set your browser to do something else with .pls (like offer to download). Or trash the file type association or set it for something other than Winamp.
Or if you're a luddite like me and can't stand plugins, prevent them all from working by commenting out the plugins lines in:
C:\Program Files\Common Files\mozilla.org\GRE\ [version here] \greprefs\all.js
This is assuming you use Mz or FF for web on Windows like a sensible person.
As usual, nothing to see here...
From ZDNet Asia: The flaw was disclosed on Monday, when Winamp maker Nullsoft, a division of America Online, released an update to fix it. The company posted version 5.13 of Winamp, while Secunia and other security companies issued alerts about the problem. Secunia rated the issue "extremely critical," its highest rating.
Flaw detected and removed. New version of Winamp out. Get the new version. Protected. Not much more difficult than that. Shouldn't there a be a "Software Vulnerabilties" section to Slashdot, where these things could be posted?
GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
A small plug for the greatest MP3 player in existance, Foobar2000
It's so awesomely customisable, it hurts.
The problem with slashdot is that most of its users were bullied and stuffed into lockers as kids!
It should be noted that no application is secure enough (except some 'Hello World!' implementations). It's not unusual that one should get hotfixes, service packs, etc. to keep ones system (relatively) secure against crackers. If you like winamp get the update and relax. As other folks said you may use other applications, mplayer is my favourite one. Of course I run it on Linux.
This was patched over a week ago, http://www.incidents.org/diary.php?date=2006-01-31 (bottom).h tml
The time from exploit to patch was very fast.
better then the length it takes other software developers to release a patch..
http://www.eeye.com/html/research/upcoming/index.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Voltaire
Winamp 5 is essentially just an updated version of Winamp 2 renamed so that it would have a higher number than the trainwreck that was Winamp 3. There's no reason not to upgrade - all the "bloat" (modern skins, video support, media library, whatever) is an install-time option. Even with all the "bloat", I find that so long as I use a classic skin, its reasonably lightweight. (Modern skins, of course, eat up more CPU/memory).
If you're still using 2.95, you're probably vulnerable to a host of security issues and missing out on a number of useful features (better AAC/mp4 support for one, I believe). I highly reccomend upgrading to 5.13.
winamp is still lite, you dont HAVE to install the extra features.
you dont HAVE to install the library,
you dont HAVE to install the modern skin support,
remove those 2 and your practicaly using winamp 2.9 with alot of bug fixes and speedups... so i dont see what all the complaining and whining is about
portfolio
That information would have been useful had WinAmp not told me that version 5.13 was already available. A WEEK AGO!
I don't know what's worse on Slashdot, a dupe, a roland, or old news.
"You'll get nothing, and you'll like it!"
Are there more computers running OS X than there are active copies of WinAMP?
If so, why are there currently no OS X viruses yet when we see an active WinAMP exploit?
Food for thought.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley