‘Big Yellow’ worm exploits slow Symantec patchers


Worm spotted targeting 6-month-old vulnerability in AV products.

An alert has been issued by

eEye Digital Security

researchers for a new worm, which they have called ‘Big Yellow’, exploiting a vulnerability in

Symantec

products detected and patched six months ago.

The worm, which

Symantec

is calling

W32.Sagevo

, targets a flaw in the remote management interface of

Symantec Antivirus

and

Symantec Client Security

products for

Windows

to gain escalated privileges for spreading, as well as attempting to download a backdoor trojan.

The flaw was patched by

Symantec

in June, a few weeks after its discovery.

Symantec

noted existence of exploit code two weeks ago, and still rate the risk as ‘low’, with only a handful of reports of users affected by the worm. However,


SANS


among others has reported increased activity targeting the port used by the worm, and anyone still running

Symantec

products not updated since June is advised to apply the patch.


Symantec

‘s announcement of the flaw is

here

, and

eEye

‘s alert on the worm is

here

.

Posted on 18 December 2006 by

Virus Bulletin


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