The latest versions of Internet Explorer and Firefox on Windows and (in the case of Firefox) Unix systems are vulnerable to attacks that could reveal the contents of sensitive files residing on a victim's hard drives.
The vulnerability resides in the functionality that allows the browsers to upload files to a remote server. It requires a victim to visit a booby-trapped website and enter text with certain characters in a comment interface or other input field.
Demonstration exploits, one for IE and the other for Firefox, show how typing a simple string into a message box reveals a Windows user's boot.ini file.
Petko D. Petkov, a researcher who has investigated the vulnerability, says similar techniques could be used to reveal more sensitive files on Windows or Unix-based machines, for example C:\WINDOWS\system32\config\SAM in the former or /etc/passwd in the latter.
The vulnerability in Firefox was tested with versions 2.0 and 1.5. It is a variant of a bug that was reported on Bugzilla as early as 2000, according to Michal Zalewski, who is credited with discovering the flaw in that browser.
Petkov is believed to have first determined that IE 7 is also vulnerable. ®
A Microsoft spokesman said the company is investigating the report. Initial findings by Microsoft's security team are consistent with the report, specifically that "an attacker could gain access to user files if the location of a given file is already known" and would then have to convince the victim to enter the location of that file in a Web page.
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IE and Firefox cough up hard drive contents
Started by
Nvyseal
, Feb 13 2007 05:58 AM
6 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 13 February 2007 - 05:58 AM
#2
Posted 13 February 2007 - 06:54 AM
Clever trick.
BTW, I tried the demo in Firefox and it didn't work. It was because I had the NoScript extension running.
If you aren't using it with Firefox, you should. (Along with Adblock Plus)
https://addons.mozil...rg/firefox/722/
And if you use IE, then you deserve whatever you get.
Seriously...
BTW, I tried the demo in Firefox and it didn't work. It was because I had the NoScript extension running.
If you aren't using it with Firefox, you should. (Along with Adblock Plus)
https://addons.mozil...rg/firefox/722/
And if you use IE, then you deserve whatever you get.
#3
Posted 13 February 2007 - 08:00 PM
weird, the mozzarella site is not responding...wtf?
#4
Posted 13 February 2007 - 08:12 PM
ah, finally got through...i usually turn of java anyway, but this is a cool addon for work (damn bunch of java lovers!) :crazy:
#5
Posted 14 February 2007 - 04:31 AM
I see no mention of Opera being a problem here either, yet another reason for converting maybe...
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