New Internet Explorer exploit discovered in the wild

Less than a week after Microsoft delivered its February patches, an exploit has emerged that takes advantage of one of the two fixed vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer (IE).

The attacker was able to reverse engineer the patch to create the exploit, SANS Internet Storm Center handler Bojan Zdrnja wrote Tuesday on the group's blog.

The targeted exploit arrives in a victim's inbox as a Word document that contains specially crafted code regarding the way IE7 handles certain types of content, said Paul Ferguson, threat researcher at Trend Micro. The code contains an ActiveX object that accesses a website containing a downloader, which exploits the vulnerability.

The victim's machine is then hit with a backdoor trojan, capable of communicating via SSL encryption with a third-party server and harvesting data such as login credentials, he said.

"As you well know from the whole Downadup/Conficker thing, cybercriminals are leveraging the fact that people don't apply patches in a timely manner," Ferguson said.

The malware appears to originate in China and may be the first inkling of a forthcoming spate of malicious emails targeting pro-Tibet groups, Ferguson said. Similar attacks occurred around this time last year.

"The 50th anniversary [of the failed Tibetan uprising against China] is right around the corner," he said. "Even though we haven't seen emails being targeted [against pro-Tibet groups], all of the fingerprints are very similar in nature to that same type of campaign."

So far, the only victim that Trend Micro is aware of is an Asian journalist, Ferguson said.

A Microsoft spokeswoman said the company is aware of the new exploit and is investigating.
close

Next Article in News

Sign up to our newsletters

More in News

Bitcoin mining botnet has become one of the most prevalent cyber threats

Fortinet researchers have tracked 100,000 new ZeroAccess trojan infections per week, making the botnet very lucrative to its owners.

House Intelligence Committee OKs amended version of controversial CISPA

House Intelligence Committee OKs amended version of controversial ...

Despite the 18-to-2 vote in favor of the bill proposal, privacy advocates likely will not be satisfied, considering two key amendments reportedly were shot down.

Judge rules hospital can ask ISP for help in ID'ing alleged hackers

Judge rules hospital can ask ISP for help ...

The case stems from two incidents where at least one individual is accused of accessing the hospital's network to spread "defamatory" messages to employees.