By
Joris Evers
Friday, June 30 2006 10:16 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39371647,00.htm
Attack code that exploits a flaw in Apple Computer's Mac OS X was publicly
released Wednesday, increasing the urgency to patch.
The code's arrival comes just a day after Apple made
an update available for its operating system. The malicious program takes
advantage of a locally exploitable vulnerability in an operating system
component called "launchd".
"Attackers may exploit this issue to execute arbitrary code with elevated
privileges," Symantec said in a security alert to customers that was updated on
Thursday.
On Tuesday, Apple delivered Mac OS X 10.4.7. The operating system update repairs a total
of five flaws. Four of them affect both the client version of Mac OS X. The
other, in the ClamAV antivirus software, has an impact on the server release.
Apple is recommending that people install all updates when they're issued to
keep their software fully up to date, a company representative said Thursday.
"This proof of concept was fixed in Tuesday's Mac OS X 10.4.7 update," the
representative said, referring to the ability for the exploit code to run.
The exploit was created by Kevin Finisterre, a security researcher at Digital
Munition. Earlier this year, Finisterre created
the Inqtana worm, which targets Mac OS X and spreads using an 8-month-old
vulnerability in Apple's Bluetooth software. His actions are in part to
demonstrate that Apple software is not unbreakable, he has said.
Apple users can download Mac OS X 10.4.7 through Software Update or the
standalone installer. Typically, the Mac OS automatically checks for updates
once a week.
Separately on Thursday, Apple put out iTunes 6.0.5, an update that it said fixes a security problem
that could be used in a denial-of-service attack or let an intruder run code on
vulnerable systems.
"The AAC file parsing code in iTunes versions prior to 6.0.5 contains an
integer overflow vulnerability," the company said on its security Web site. "Parsing a maliciously-crafted AAC file
could cause iTunes to terminate or potentially execute arbitrary code. iTunes
6.0.5 addresses this issue by improving the validation checks used when loading
AAC files."
The iTunes vulnerability affects Mac OS X versions 10.2.8 or later and
Microsoft Windows XP and 2000, Apple said.