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August 3rd, 2009

Mozilla patches 'critical' Firefox flaws

Posted by Ryan Naraine @ 9:12 am

Categories: Arbitrary Code Execution, Botnets, Browsers, Data theft, Denial of Service (DoS), Exploit code, Firefox, Hackers, Malware, Microsoft, Mozilla, Open source, Patch Watch, Research, Responsible disclosure, Vulnerability research, Zero-day attacks

Tags: Mozilla Firefox, Flaw, Vulnerability, Patch Management, SSL, Web Browser, Mozilla Corp., Certificate, Ssl/Tls, Web Browsers

Mozilla has released two advisories to patch serious security flaws in its flagship Firefox Web browser.

The vulnerabilities are rated “critical,” meaning they can be exploited by malicious hackers to run harmful code and install software, requiring no user interaction beyond normal browsing.   These issues were separately discussed at last week’s Black Hat conference by researchers Moxie Marlinspike and Dan Kaminsky.

The skinny:

MFSA 2009-42 Compromise of SSL-protected communication

IOActive security researcher Dan Kaminsky (right) reported a mismatch in the treatment of domain names in SSL certificates between SSL clients and the Certificate Authorities (CA) which issue server certificates. In particular, if a malicious person requested a certificate for a host name with an invalid null character in it most CAs would issue the certificate if the requester owned the domain specified after the null, while most SSL clients (browsers) ignored that part of the name and used the unvalidated part in front of the null. This made it possible for attackers to obtain certificates that would function for any site they wished to target. These certificates could be used to intercept and potentially alter encrypted communication between the client and a server such as sensitive bank account transactions.

This vulnerability was independently reported to us by researcher Moxie Marlinspike who also noted that since Firefox relies on SSL to protect the integrity of security updates this attack could be used to serve malicious updates.

MFSA 2009-43 Heap overflow in certificate regexp parsing

Moxie Marlinspike reported a heap overflow vulnerability in the code that handles regular expressions in certificate names. This vulnerability could be used to compromise the browser and run arbitrary code by presenting a specially crafted certificate to the client. This code provided compatibility with the non-standard regular expression syntax historically supported by Netscape clients and servers. With version 3.5 Firefox switched to the more limited industry-standard wildcard syntax instead and is not vulnerable to this flaw.

Mozilla is distributing the patches via the browser’s built-in update mechanism.

Ryan NaraineRyan Naraine is a journalist and security evangelist at Kaspersky Lab. He manages Threatpost.com, a security news portal. Here is Ryan's full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 19 Talkback(s)
yes i did
The point i was trying to make is every software has bugs, its just the matter of time when we discover these.
The hate-hate theory going on with IE, which is my favorite browser, only shows the i... (Read the rest)
Posted by: sunny-arora@... Posted on: 08/16/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Never ending critical flaws  LBiege | 08/03/09
This is NOT because of html  Lerianis10 | 08/03/09
To human is to err.  phatkat | 08/04/09
RE: Mozilla patches 'critical' Firefox flaws  Loverock Davidson | 08/03/09
Yes. Those are dreadlocks.  CounterEthicsCommissioner | 08/03/09
Or perhaps you're running Firefox 3.5? (NT)  Zogg | 08/03/09
Doh!  Loverock Davidson | 08/03/09
It's time to quit using Internet Exploder  honeymonster | 08/03/09
Err, actually...  Zogg | 08/03/09
IE "out-of-band" patch  JDThompson | 08/04/09
What prompted them to do that?  UAC nanny screen | 08/04/09
That was for a different bug.  Zogg | 08/05/09
Neither of these bugs is present in Firefox 3.5  Zogg | 08/03/09
Ryan Naraine: Learn English for christ sake  Macintoshtoffy | 08/03/09
Good to give credit where it is due  dirk.r.gently@... | 08/03/09
I have no problem with Ryan's English -  mhenriday | 08/04/09
wow! Kiss the royal browser!  sunny-arora@... | 08/04/09
Perhaps you did not read the messages  coopejx@... | 08/05/09
yes i did  sunny-arora@... | 08/16/09

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