Computerworld
Quick Menu
Search



Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Finance
Security
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
Computerworld 2007Subscribe to Computerworld
40 years of the most authoritative source of news and information for IT leaders.

Months-old Excel exploit goes public

With the attack now widely available, patch ASAP, urges Symantec

Zone

Featured Zone
The Security Zone

With the mobility of employees and the ease with which external devices can be brought in and out of a network, continuing to build your security plan for network servers and clients is a must. Fortunately, there is much that organizations can do to protect themselves from attacks - internal and external. Having the right policies, procedures and server configurations is critical...

Learn more in The Security Zone
See All Zones

March 24, 2008 (Computerworld) Attack code that exploits a bug in Microsoft Excel went public last week, a security researcher said, prompting him to urge users to immediately apply a March 11 patch.

The exploit, which was posted to the Milw0rm.com site last Friday, is the first made public for any of the seven vulnerabilities that were Microsoft Corp. patched several days earlier in the security update tagged as MS08-014. That bulletin fixed multiple flaws in Excel 2000, 2002, 2003 and 2007 on Windows, and Excel 2004 and Excel 2008 on the Mac.

"The vulnerability that this exploit is designed to leverage was originally exploited in the wild on January 15, 2008," said Symantec Corp. security analyst Aaron Adams in an alert to customers of the company's DeepSight threat-notification service. "We believe it leverages CVE-2008-0081 ... [and] involves the manipulation of an uninitialized stack variable by specially crafting an Excel file such that stack data will be pre-populated with user-supplied data and therefore able to influence the value of the uninitialized variable."

Microsoft labeled CVE-2008-0081 "critical" on Excel 2000, and "important" on Excel 2002 and 2003.

Microsoft first acknowledged the Excel bug more than two months ago, when it confirmed that hackers were attacking Windows machines via Excel. At the time, the company's security team characterized the attacks as "targeted and not widespread."

Once the attack code was publicly posted on Friday, Adams advised users to apply MS08-014 immediately. "This should be considered a high priority in light of the availability of exploit code," he said. "Additionally, users should be advised to carry out extreme caution when handling Excel files received online. If possible, Excel files should be filtered at the e-mail gateway until the updates can be applied."

The MS08-014 update was the same one that Microsoft had to re-release last week after it discovered one of the Excel fixes had produced a regression error that generated incorrect results in some calculations.



What People Are Saying

Shark Bait
View Shark BaitFired up about IT? Join Sharkbait and share your true tales of IT. SharkBait is the place for you to sound off about everything IT – the good, the bad, and the rest of the weird stuff you deal with every day.

New baits
Shark Bait
Webcast

Turning information into a Competitive Advantage "Turning information into a Competitive Advantage"

Companies today are realizing that competitive advantage is harder to sustain when based solely on gains in productivity and cost efficiency. The focus is shifting to invest more in business optimization initiatives which rely on trusted information to develop new insights that deliver better business results. But how can this be done efficiently in a business environment across multiple applications and processes. The answer is an Information Agenda - an innovative approach to transforming business information into a strategic asset for competitive advantage.

View this webcast now! more

See more Webcasts more
TODAY'S TOP BLOG
Patrick Thibodeau:
Satellite images of U.S military bases
Which is more important? Helping terrorists or protecting military bases? Answer: protecting Web 2.0 ... [more]
White Papers
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services.
The 2008 ERP in Manufacturing Benchmark Report Summary
IronPort Web Reputation Filters Tech Note
Designed to Manage Lean Principles
View more whitepapers 
 


Webcast: The Automation of IT Compliance Programs: Reducing Risk, Cost and Complexity of Corporate Compliance
To meet the growing number of industry and federal regulations, businesses spend significant time, effort, and budget determining how to best meet continuously evolving IT compliance requirements this new Forrester Research and Juniper Networks Webcast led by industry experts who examine global IT security and compliance trends, common IT compliance issues and challenges, and best practices for successful IT compliance programs.

View this webcast 
Whitepaper: Tackling the Top Five Network Access Control Challenges
The major challenge enterprises face today is how to create innovative business models and to increase productivity by opening the network to a dynamic workforce, while at the same time protecting critical assets from the vulnerabilities that openness and user mobility bring. In addition, to comply with industry and governmental regulations, enterprises must prove that they have stringent controls in place to restrict access to sensitive data. This paper describes the top five networking access control challenges that companies like yours are facing and solutions that they are deploying today.

Download this white paper 
Whitepaper: Addressing PCI Compliance with a Comprehensive Network Access Control Solution
The Payment Card Industry (PCI) is one of the most comprehensive data security standards in a cluster of regulations that have emerged over the past decade. Meeting its requirements is both complicated and expensive for many companies. Learn how a comprehensive access control solution allows retailers and consumer organizations adhere to the core tenets of PCI, and delivering the necessary information and reports needed for compliance audits.
Download this white paper 
Whitepaper: Control System Cyber Vulnerabilities and Mitigation of Risk for Utilities
Today's global industrial infrastructure includes thousands of electric utilities, water/wastewater management companies, oil and gas suppliers, chemical manufacturers and other facilities critical to daily functioning. Learn why relying on off-the-shelf operating systems and Internet-based remote access control to carry out production tasks, traditional control networks can leave today's global industrial infrastructures vulnerable to hackers, extortionists, worms, viruses and application-level attacks. Deploying network-based security can protect these at-risk systems–without requiring infrastructure replacement.
Download this white paper