Patches come thick and fast in major update spree


Monthly and out-of-band issues flood admins’ to-do lists.

The release of this month’s Patch Tuesday security bulletins from

Microsoft

, with a fairly average 10 alerts covering 34 separate vulnerabilities, is accompanied by a number of additional fixes and updates which will keep security admins busy this week.

Adobe

has announced plans to provide an out-of-band patch for a major flaw in their

Flash player

software, while

Apple

is releasing updated versions of

Safari

which include a raft of security fixes.

Of the ten Patch Tuesday bulletins, only 3 are labelled ‘Critical’ by

Microsoft

, those affecting media decompression,

ActiveX

and, as always,

Internet Explorer

. The remaining seven are marked as only ‘Important’ by their creators, although all but one are rated ‘critical’ on at least some types of system on the scale used by

ISC

, as reported in the thorough briefing in the

SANS

Handler’s Diary,

here

.

Microsoft

‘s own descriptions of the patches can be found in the official bulletin

here

.

The latest in the torrent of serious vulnerabilities uncovered in

Adobe

‘s popular product range is a highly-exploitable flaw in the current version of

Flash Player

, which affects users of multiple platforms and will also impact users of version 9 of

Acrobat

and the ubiquitous

Reader

.

Adobe

plan to release a fix for

Flash Player

on

Windows

,

Mac

and

Linux

by tomorrow, but

Solaris

users will have to wait a little longer, while the corresponding patch for

Acrobat

and

Reader

may take several more weeks to arrive.

Older versions of the PDF handling software, and also a release candidate for a new version of

Flash Player

, are thought to be safe from the flaws, but

Acrobat

and

Reader

users can work around the problem by deleting, renaming or otherwise rendering inoperative the

authplay.dll

component which provides

Flash

functionality within PDF documents.

Adobe

‘s advisory is

here

, with a blog post providing more details

here

.

Finally

Apple

‘s big announcement this week has been the latest versions of their

Safari

browser, fixing a swathe of problems noted in previous editions. Most notable among these patches is a fix for a long-known flaw in most browsers allowing malicious sites to harvest history data from the browser, for which

Safari

is one of the first to provide a fix.

Apple

‘s list of vulnerabilities covered by the new releases is

here

, with detailed coverage of the history-harvesting problem in

The Register


here

.

Posted on 09 June 2010 by

Virus Bulletin


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