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Safari "Carpet Bomb" Attack Code Released

snydeq writes "A hacker has posted attack code that exploits critical flaws in the Safari and Internet Explorer Web browsers. The source code can be used to run unauthorized software on a victim's machine, and could be used by criminals in Web-based computer attacks, security experts say. The public example of the attack code allows attackers to litter a victim's desktop with executable files, an attack known as 'carpet bombing.' In combination with bugs in Windows and Internet Explorer, attackers can run unauthorized software on a victim's computer."

8 of 118 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Secure from the ground up! by spud603 · · Score: 5, Informative

    RTFA. Actually, it looks like this is a windows problem. Safari automatically downloads a file to the desktop. Then when you start Internet Explorer it runs the file on your desktop and there is the problem.
    So the real issue is that Safari can be told to automatically download a file while internet explorer will automatically run a malicious dll from the desktop. actual post and proof-of-concept code here.
    seems like a misleading summary to me.

  2. Wrong section, eds! by himself · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is a _Windows_ Safari problem, not an _OS X_ Safari problem. And yes I RTFBlogPost.

    1. Re:Wrong section, eds! by Qwerpafw · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's a Windows Internet Explorer problem, not a Mac OS X Safari problem.

      the "bug" is that Safari has the users desktop as the default download directory, and will automatically download files if you go to some websites. This is normal and fine behavior. The problem is that Internet Explorer loads files from the desktop on launch, which means if you craft a malicious library and put it on the desktop Internet Explorer will happily load it.

      Microsoft should fix IE to avoid loading files from the Desktop.

    2. Re:Wrong section, eds! by Chas · · Score: 4, Informative

      No. It's a problem with Windows Internet Explorer that's exacerbated by a problem with Windows Safari.

      Safari should NOT be auto-dumping files onto the Windows desktop. PERIOD.

      There's enough blame to go around everywhere.

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
  3. Quick Workaround... by Manip · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here are two very quick temp' workarounds for the issue.

    1) Launch IE from a location other than your desktop (e.g. Start Menu, Quick Launch Tray).

    2) Go to Program Files\Internet Explorer, Create Shortcut, and then place that shortcut on your desktop. Make sure the "Start In" setting is set to any location other than your Desktop.

  4. Re:Secure from the ground up! by spud603 · · Score: 4, Informative
    from TFA:

    The problem originated from an error that Windows Internet Explorer will load some program library files(DLL) from user's Desktop instead of its own library file folder(usually C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32). Apple's Safari for Windows downloads and saves requested file to user's Desktop by default - this default behavior itself does not constitute a mistake.
    The 'workarounds' suggested by MS include "Change the download location of content in Safari to a newly created directory". I don't actually know what's going on with this, but it seems like it's IE opening an improperly-named (or maybe there's some bad meta-data that comes along with it?) file from the desktop, no matter how it got there.
  5. Re:Secure from the ground up! by Richard_at_work · · Score: 5, Informative

    Read Slashdot: Microsoft Urges Windows Users To Shun Safari - it explains what happens in more detail.

    Basically, on Windows Safari automatically downloads files, in imitation of its behavior on OSX, but whereas on OSX it downloads them to a nice ~/Downloads directory on Windows it downloads them to the desktop. Also, on OSX Safari tags the downloaded file as 'unsafe', but it fails to use the Windows functionality to do the same on Windows. This leaves a whole load of files that you never asked for or wanted lying around on your computer in a state that is one step away from being executed.

    This 'attack' allows a malicious person to force Safari to dump thousands of files on your desktop, which in and of itself is not a nice thing, but when coupled with other exploits it can lead to code execution of these files you never wanted in the first place - whether those exploits are patched by the vendor (Microsoft) or not, we both know that a significant portion of desktops are not kept fully up-to-date with security releases.

  6. Yup! by nobodyman · · Score: 4, Informative

    It would be easy enough to test this out though. manually download this DLL using IE (which marks the file as unsafe), then fire up IE7.
    I tried it out: the exploit still works when you manually download the file using IE instead of Safari. So either IE isn't marking downloaded executables as unsafe either, or IE ignores this flag when loading DLL's. Either way it undermines the"Apple is at fault" argument.

    Carpet bombing is still an issue, if for no reason than it is an annoyance.