By
Joris Evers
Thursday, November 02 2006 12:07 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,61964201,00.htm
A second security flaw that could cause the new Firefox 2 browser to crash
has been publicly disclosed.
The vulnerability lies in the way the open-source browser handles JavaScript
code. Viewing a rigged Web page will cause the browser to exit, a representative
for Mozilla, the publisher of the software, said Wednesday. Contrary to claims
on security mailing lists, the bug cannot be exploited to run arbitrary code on
a PC running Firefox 2, the representative said.
This flaw in the JavaScript Range object is different from the
denial-of-service vulnerability in Firefox 2 that was
confirmed by Mozilla last week. That bug is related to a more serious
security hole, which was fixed in earlier versions of Firefox, the organization has
said.
The two "crashers" are the only publicly released vulnerabilities that have
been confirmed by Mozilla in the week since Firefox 2 was launched. The issues
are only minor, the organization has said.
By contrast, Microsoft's Internet Explorer 7 update suffers from a
spoofing flaw, discovered a week after Microsoft
released IE 7 on Oct. 18. The vulnerability could help crooks mask phishing
scams, the type of attack Microsoft designed the browser to thwart.
According to Secunia, a security monitoring company, there are at least two other vulnerabilities in IE 7. Microsoft has
disputed these issues, saying that one reported problem lies
in Outlook Express, not IE 7, and the other is a part
of the product design, not a flaw.
Release of the new Web browsers set off a race among bug hunters to come up
with the first security hole in either program. So far, though, none of the
reported flaws could be exploited to hijack a PC running the browser, the most
serious type of vulnerability.