By
Dawn Kawamoto
Tuesday, December 12 2006 09:36 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,61974267,00.htm
A second security vulnerability has been discovered in Microsoft Word in
less than a week.
The zero-day flaw, which is could let an attacker gain remote access to a
person's system, affects Word 2000, Word 2002, Word 2003 and Word Viewer 2003,
according
to a Microsoft security advisory posted Monday. Word 2007 is not
affected, Microsoft said.
"From the initial reports and investigation, we can confirm that the
vulnerability is being exploited on a very, very limited and targeted basis," Microsoft stated in its advisory.
Nonetheless, security provider Secunia said Monday that it is rating this latest Word security
flaw as "extremely critical" because it is unpatched and because malicious
attackers are currently exploiting the vulnerability.
In this case, attackers are taking advantage of a flaw that arises when an
unspecified error occurs when processing a Word document, Secunia said in its
advisory.
Microsoft noted that the vulnerability is different from the security
flaw discovered in Word last week, which also is a zero-day problem. In
order to activate that flaw, a person would need to open a malicious Word file
that was hosted on a Web site or an attachment that arrives via e-mail.
The software giant is not expected to have patches
available for the flaws when it issues its monthly round of security updates next week.