By
Joris Evers
Monday, January 08 2007 09:20 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,61979896,00.htm
A recently discovered security weakness in the widely used Acrobat Reader
software could put Net users at more risk than previously thought, experts
warned last week.
Initially, security professionals thought that the problem was restricted and
exposed
only Web-related data or could support phishing scams. Now it has been
discovered that miscreants could exploit the problem to access all information
on a victim's hard disk drive, said Web security specialists at WhiteHat
Security and SPI Dynamics.
Key to increased access is where hostile links point. When the issue was
first discovered, experts warned of links with malicious
JavaScript to PDF files hosted on Web sites. While risky, this actually
limits the attacker's access to a PC. It has now been discovered that those
limits can be removed by directing a malicious link to a PDF file on a victim's
PC.
"This means any JavaScript can access the user's local machine," Billy
Hoffman, lead engineer at SPI Dynamics, said in an e-mailed statement.
"Depending on the browser, this means the JavaScript can read the user's files,
delete them, execute programs, send the contents to the attacker, et cetera.
This is much worse than an attack in the remote zone."
By contrast, a link to a PDF hosted on a Web site with malicious JavaScript
code would run on the user's machine with limited access, or the "remote zone,"
Hoffman said. For example, script code in a link to a PDF on "bank.com" would be
able to communicate with bank.com and access its cookies, he said. Such a standard
cross-site-scripting attack could allow account hijacks, for example.
The security problem exists because the Web browser plug-in of the Adobe
Systems' Acrobat Reader allows JavaScript code appended to links to PDF files to
run once the link is clicked, said Jeremiah Grossman, chief technology officer
at WhiteHat Security.
For an attack to work, a malicious link has to point to an existing PDF file
on the Web or on the target system. PDFs are abundant on the Net and finding one
on a local system also isn't hard, a sample PDF file comes with Acrobat Reader
and is installed in a predictable location on PCs, Grossman said.
The security problem was first disclosed at the Chaos Computer Club conference in Germany over the
holidays in a paper by Stafano Di Paola and Giorgio Fedon. The extended scope of
the issue
was publicized Thursday by a hacker using the moniker "RSnake".
Adobe is aware of the claims that an attack could have broader implications,
but had not verified the issue, a company representative said in a statement
e-mailed last week.
"Based upon info we have, Flash Player, Reader and modern browsers should
restrict such an exploit, but we haven't completed our evaluation of all possible scenarios," the representative said.
To mitigate the threat, Adobe says people can upgrade to Adobe
Reader 8, the latest version of the Adobe software released last month.
Adobe is also working on updates to previous versions that will resolve this issue, the company has said.