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xpgeek
19-10-2006, 06:17 PM
Less than 24 hours after its final release, Internet Explorer 7 has been found to be vulnerable to an exploit dating back to November 2003, which was discovered affecting IE6 last April. The issue surrounds Microsoft's handling of MIME HTML resources, security company Secunia said in an advisory.

The vulnerability apparently involves a very simple trick where a call to a MIME HTML, or MHTML, resource can trigger the running of an executable file, even with high-level security settings.

An MHTML resource is a "Web archive" of multiple elements, often including media and sometimes (though not preferably) executable files. Through Microsoft browsers, it's addressed as a single resource with the extension .MHT.

A call placed to an .MHT resource is phrased using an old Microsoft two-part convention, where the location of the resource is separated from its identity with an exclamation point, not unlike similar syntaxes in Excel and earlier versions of Visual Basic.

As a researcher discovered in late 2003, Microsoft's default handling of this two-part convention also works the same way: if the location doesn't actually exist or cannot be resolved, the interpreter assumes the name of the resource exists on the local system. Thus, if the identity happens to be the name of a real executable file, it'll run.

Last April, another researcher informed Secunia that a version of the same vulnerability continued to plague IE6. At that time, the firm posted a non-malicious test page, to enable users to see whether their IE browsers were vulnerable. To this date, Secunia believes the IE6 vulnerability to be unpatched.

Apparently, the same test conducted on the final IE7 release revealed the new browser to be similarly vulnerable. Secunia rates this problem as "less critical," perhaps mainly because this is a trigger mechanism rather than a full-scale virus or Trojan. Conceivably, however, it could be utilized by malicious users within a more complete malware setup.

Source (http://www.betanews.com/article/IE7_Final_Vulnerable_to_Old_Exploit/1161275418)

Neo, Knock, Knock
20-10-2006, 11:30 PM
From the "Microsoft Security Response Center Blog!"

Information on Reports of IE 7 Vulnerability
Hi, this is Christopher Budd.

We’ve gotten some questions here today about public reports claiming there’s a new vulnerability in Internet Explorer 7. This is an issue that we have under investigation and so we have some technical information we can share about the issue.

These reports are technically inaccurate: the issue concerned in these reports is not in Internet Explorer 7 (or any other version) at all. Rather, it is in a different Windows component, specifically a component in Outlook Express. While these reports use Internet Explorer as a vector the vulnerability itself is in Outlook Express.

While we are aware that the issue has been publicly disclosed, we’re not aware of it being used in any attacks against customers.


We do have this under investigation and are monitoring the situation closely and we’ll take appropriate action to protect our customers once we’ve completed the investigation.


I hope that helps to clarify

So, should we users install IE7 or wait for Microsoft to resolve?

xpgeek
21-10-2006, 03:36 AM
I wouldn't worry about it or let it stop you from installing IE7.

IE6 also has the same issue, but, its rated a 'Less' critical vulnerability on http://secunia.com , because its one of those exploits that a number of things have to happen in an order to actually work. Its not really THAT big of a security risk, just a potential one.

Wouldn't worry about it until it is actually being used in attacks, and like Microsoft said, its not, and probly won't be either.