http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2138304,00.asp
By Brian Prince
May 29, 2007
Security research firm Immunity released exploit code for a serious bug
affecting Mac OS X less than 24 hours after Apple released a patch for
it.
The flaw is a buffer overflow vulnerability in the UPnP Internet Gateway
Device Standardized Device Control code used to create port mappings on
home NAT (Network Address Translation) gateways in the OS X
mDNSResponder implementation.
Apple issued a patch for the vulnerability late in the week of May 21.
The flaw, one of 17 security issues addressed by the company in the
update, could lead to the remote execution of code. It affects Mac OS X
v10.4.9 and Mac OS X Server v10.4.9.
The exploit was made available on May 25, less than 24 hours later, to
members of Immunity's partner program.
"So essentially [it's] a reliable remote root on everyone at Starbucks
or on all those OS X fiends at security conventions," Dave Aitel, chief
technology officer for Immunity, based in Miami, wrote in a posting
about the exploit. "The Immunity exploit will do so on either PPC or
Intel, your pick, and since the service restarts, you get to pick
twice."
Jose Nazario, a software and security engineer at Arbor Networks, based
in Lexington, Mass., said it was unusual for an exploit of a Mac
vulnerability to be released so quickly.
"I don't know of any others that have been quite that fast, within a day
or two," Nazario said, adding that Mac OS X has increasingly become a
source of interest for hackers and security researchers alike.
5B5B
Received on Fri Jun 1 02:37:40 2007