Adobe investigating zero-day bug in Flash
Researchers on Wednesday said they have uncovered attacks in the wild in which malicious Acrobat PDF files are exploiting a vulnerability in Flash and dropping a Trojan onto computers.
The situation could affect tons of users since Flash exists in all popular browsers, is available in PDF files, and is largely operating system-independent.
Any software that uses Flash could be vulnerable to the attack, according to Symantec. Adobe Reader is vulnerable because its Flash interpreter is vulnerable, said Paul Royal, principal researcher at Purewire, a Web security services provider.
In a post on its Web site, Adobe said it "is aware of reports of a potential vulnerability in Adobe Reader and Acrobat 9.1.2 and Adobe Flash Player 9 and 10. We are currently investigating this potential issue and will have an update once we get more information."
"The authors of the exploit have managed to take a bug and turn it into a reliable exploit using a heap spray technique," Patrick Fitzgerald writes on a Symantec Security blog post.
"Typically an attacker would entice a user to visit a malicious Web site or send a malicious PDF via e-mail," he writes. "Once the unsuspecting user visits the Web site or opens the PDF this exploit will allow further malware to be dropped onto the victim's machine. The malicious PDF files are detected as Trojan.Pidief.G and the dropped files as Trojan Horse."
It appears the exploit was first developed about two weeks ago, Royal said. The bug itself has been around since December 2008.
The hole is exploitable on Windows XP and Vista users are protected if User Account Control (UAC) is enabled, Symantec said.
US-CERT offered information about workarounds on its Web site:
Disable Flash in Adobe Reader 9 on Windows platforms by renaming the following files: "%ProgramFiles%\Adobe\Reader 9.0\Reader\authplay.dll" and "%ProgramFiles%\Adobe\Reader 9.0\Reader\rt3d.dll".
Disable Flash Player or selectively enable Flash content as described in the "Securing Your Web Browser" document.
Elinor Mills covers Internet security and privacy. She joined CNET News in 2005 after working as a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Portugal and writing for The Industry Standard, the IDG News Service, and the Associated Press. E-mail Elinor. 





Even better, I'm so glad I switched to Linux.
And yours are pure Apple FUD so how is what he's doing any different then what you are doing?
I think it would be clearer if you split the sentence up: "The hole is exploitable on Windows XP. Vista users are protected if User Account Control (UAC) is enabled, Symantec said."
People should just upgrade to Windows 7 in a few months. That will solve most of the virus problems that we are having right now.
http://www.blueridgenetworks.com/securitynowblog/endpoint_security/adobe-flash-attack-exploit-advanced-zero-day-computer-protection-required
Only three months ago I purchased an edition of Adobe CS4. When I run Secunia PSI, it shows the following CS4 components as having issues with Flash plug-ins. There doesn't seem to be a solution short of uninstalling the Flash components in the affected apps. I haven't yet contacted Adobe regarding the issues that the Secunia scan identifies.
Adobe CS4 components flagged by Secunia PSI v1.5.0.0
Adobe AIR Flash 10.x Plug-in
Adobe AIR Flash 9.x Plug-in
Bridge CS4 Flash 9.x Plug-in
Contribute CS4 Flash 10.x Plug-in
Device Central CS4 Flash 9.x Opera Plug-in
Dreamweaver CS4 Flash 10.x Plug-in
Extension Manager CS4 Flash 9.x Plug-in
Considering how much CS4 costs to purchase, I'm very disappointed that Adobe isn't doing a better job in dealing with these vulnerabilities. I run Adobe Updater on a regular basis, yet none of these issues have been addressed in the last couple of months. While I don't know for sure if these CS4 components are vulnerable, I think to be safe I must assume that they are.
- by baconstang July 23, 2009 4:05 PM PDT
- I wish I didn't have to read to the end of the article to find it doesn't apply to OSX.
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