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OS X Leopard... more than two million copies...

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OS X Leopard... Latest news !!

Cupertino (CA) – Apple today said that the latest version of its Mac OS X 10.5 operating system exceeded the launch sales of its predecessor “Tiger”. More than two million copies were delivered to customers over the weekend.

Read the article here after : http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/Leopard-OS-sales,news-26710.html


Found on : http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/

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Secunia Advisory : Microsoft Windows Vector Markup Language Buffer Overflow

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Microsoft Windows Vector Markup Language Buffer Overflow


- Extremely critical - From remote - Issued 1 hour ago.

A vulnerability has been reported in Microsoft Windows, which can be exploited by malicious people to compromise a user's system.


Secunia Advisory: SA23677

Release Date: 2007-01-09

Critical: Extremely critical

Impact: System access

Where: From remote

Solution Status: Vendor Patch

Description:

A vulnerability has been reported in Microsoft Windows, which can be exploited by malicious people to compromise a user's system.

The vulnerability is caused due to an integer overflow error in the Vector Markup Language (VML) implementation and can be exploited to cause a heap-based buffer overflow via e.g. a specially crafted web page or HTML e-mail.

Successful exploitation allows execution of arbitrary code.

NOTE: According to Microsoft, the vulnerability is being actively exploited.

Solution:

Apply patches.

Windows XP SP2:

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=81FB6A72-AC8A-4B28-905F-A44691D69432

Windows XP Professional x64 Edition:

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=D06FD167-4F3E-4A2C-B52C-7426DDAD6828

Windows Server 2003 (optionally with SP1):

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=4FEE481F-DACE-4EAC-9AFE-BC28ADD70CC5

Windows Server 2003 for Itanium-based systems (optionally with SP1):

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=C517FB85-128E-43DB-A659-38AF32283716

Windows Server 2003 x64 Edition:

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=FF4A1F24-C1E9-4223-965B-14C4793AAF96

Internet Explorer 5.01 SP4 on Windows 2000 SP4:

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=B1C7F765-772C-4EEB-9438-BC820CB929E1

Internet Explorer 6 SP1 on Windows 2000 SP4:

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=922A3569-85D1-4584-9B84-4AA7304C69BB

Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP SP2:

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=55A0A6EC-FEFA-40BB-BB6B-3AAB50275A73

Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP Pro x64 Edition:

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=B5A8B1F2-6AF0-4F03-989C-C8DE2EACE71D

Internet Explorer 7 on Windows Server 2003 (optionally with SP1):

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=08E5CD2E-55C0-4AC9-859F-1B24497B31CE

Internet Explorer 7 on Windows Server 2003 for Itanium-based systems (optionally with SP1):

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=48B4D271-D494-4A5C-ABA8-11B3B4584902

Internet Explorer 7 on Windows Server 2003 x64 Edition:

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/de...=F9C3E0DE-DB66-4D83-829F-C93052BDB1FA

Original Advisory:

MS07-004 (KB929969):

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/Bulletin/MS07-004.mspx

iDefense Labs:

http://labs.idefense.com/intelligence/vulnerabilities/display.php?id=462


Go to Secunia website.

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Browsers : Internet Explorer Unsafe for 284 Days in 2006

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Internet Explorer Unsafe for 284 Days in 2006

Security Fix spent the past several weeks compiling statistics on how long it took some of the major software vendors to issue patches for security flaws in their products. Since Windows is the most-used operating system in the world, it makes sense to lead off with data on Microsoft's security updates in 2006.


First, a note on the methodology behind this blog post: The data presented here builds on a project I began in late 2005 looking back on three years of efforts by Microsoft to address only the most severe security holes in its software. I conducted that same research again last month, individually contacting nearly all of the security researchers who submitted reports of critical flaws in Microsoft products to learn from them not only the dates that they had submitted their findings to the company, but also any other security trends or anomalies they observed in working with the world's largest software maker.

Several weeks prior to posting this information, I shared the data I had gathered with Microsoft. The officials I dealt with helpfully concurred or quibbled slightly with some of my findings, but the company raised no objections that would materially affect the results presented in this particular study of IE flaws. In fact, if you examine the links included in the vulnerability chart that accompanies this post, you can see for yourself how the data is supported by information posted on the Web over the past year.

Patching Internet Explorer in 2006

For all its touted security improvements, the release of Microsoft's new Internet Explorer 7 browser in November came too late in the year to improve the lot of IE users, who make up roughly 80 percent of the world's online community. For a total 284 days in 2006 (or more than nine months out of the year), exploit code for known, unpatched critical flaws in pre-IE7 versions of the browser was publicly available on the Internet. Likewise, there were at least 98 days last year in which no software fixes from Microsoft were available to fix IE flaws that criminals were actively using to steal personal and financial data from users.

In a total of ten cases last year, instructions detailing how to leverage "critical" vulnerabilities in IE were published online before Microsoft had a patch to fix them.

Microsoft labels software vulnerabilities "critical" -- its most severe rating -- if the flaws could be exploited to criminal advantage without any action on the part of the user, or by merely convincing an IE user to click on a link, visit a malicious Web site, or open a specially crafted e-mail or e-mail attachment.

[The chart posted here shows the overlap of threats from various IE flaws throughout the year.]

In contrast, Internet Explorer's closest competitor in terms of market share -- Mozilla's Firefox browser -- experienced a single period lasting just nine days last year in which exploit code for a serious security hole was posted online before Mozilla shipped a patch to remedy the problem.

Criminals specializing in Internet fraud continued to ply much of their trade with the aid of security flaws in the Microsoft browser last year. In 2006, the company issued patches to fix a total of four "zero-day" flaws in IE. Zero-day (or 0day) attacks are so named because software vendors have no time to develop a fix for the flaws before they are exploited by cyber crooks for financial or personal gain.

The first major flaw in a Windows program last year involved one that could be easily exploited via Internet Explorer. In late December 2005, experts tracked organized criminals hacking into sites and seeding them with code that installed password-stealing spyware on machines used by anyone who merely visited the sites with IE. Microsoft initially downplayed the severity of the attacks, until it became clear that the threat was fairly widespread and that thousands of customers had already been attacked in the span of a few days. The threat was seen as so severe that a large number of security experts urged users to download and install a patch produced by a third party until Microsoft developed an official fix.

In September, attackers would exploit an unpatched flaw in non-Microsoft Web server software to install malicious code on thousands of legitimate Web sites that could infect Windows machines when users merely browsed the sites with IE. Much like the IE flaw first detected in December 2005, this sophisticated attack by organized criminals also would prompt a series of third-party security patches in the days before Microsoft issued an official update.

Check back with Security Fix on Friday for a look at the number of vulnerabilities that Microsoft patched in its Office applications last year.


Go to the Washington Post website.