Main Menu
Home
News Feeds
Blog
Services
Forum
FAQs
Contact Us
Search
Resources
Gallery
Links
Symantec Web-Remote
Chat
User Menu
Arcade Games
Login Form
Username

Password

Remember me
Forgotten your password?
No account yet? Create one
Letterman Subscribe
Keep yourself updated with our FREE newsletters now!

Name

E-Mail Address
Subscribe
Unsubscribe
Syndicate

Macromedia Patches PDF Print E-mail

Macromedia Patches..

Macromedia Patches Flash Security Flaw

Attacker could use a specially formatted Flash file to gain control of a user's PC, security company warns.

A security vulnerability in the widely used Macromedia Flash player can allow an attacker to gain control over a user's PC, eEye Digital Security warned Monday.

A specially formatted Flash file can cause a header overflow in the Flash software, potentially giving an attacker control over a PC, eEye said in a security advisory. Exploiting an overflow flaw generally allows attackers to load malicious code onto a victim's system and to run that code.

To exploit the vulnerability, an attacker has to hand-edit the Flash file with a binary editor as the Flash authoring tool does not produce files that contain the vulnerability on its own, Macromedia said in a separate bulletin on its Web site.

Serious Situation
A corrupt Flash file could be placed on a Web site or sent to a user in an HTML e-mail. The vulnerability is serious because Flash is widely used on various operating systems and because vulnerable versions of the software are delivered as part of many software packages, said eEye, based in Aliso Viejo, California.

Affected are all versions of the Macromedia Flash Player prior to version 6.0.65.0, which was released late last week to fix the issue, Macromedia said. All users are advised to upgrade to the new version, the San Francisco-based company said.

EEye in the past year has found numerous vulnerabilities in Macromedia's Flash software. The overflow vulnerability reported Monday is similar to a bug in the Flash player discovered in August, but with variations in the modified Flash code written by the attacker, eEye said.

Source: IDG News Service

< Prev   Next >
Security News
ZDNET VideoThe Future Of... Clothes
Where Technology Means Business: ZDNet delivers the best tech news, and resources for IT hardware, software, networking and services. It's the top site for IT managers and tech-savvy business people.
Read more...
Google announces open-source video format WebM

Read more...
iPhone 4 camera features

Read more...
Netflix on the iPhone

Read more...
iMovie comes to the iPhone

Read more...
iPhone 4's new gyroscope

Read more...
iPhone 4 unveiled

Read more...
Cloud panel: Interoperability a mandate for virtualization

Read more...