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Technical details of the targeted attack using IE vulnerability CVE-2013-3918

Over the weekend we became aware of an active attack relying on an unknown remote code execution vulnerability of a legacy ActiveX component used by Internet Explorer. We are releasing this blog to confirm one more time that the code execution vulnerability will be fixed in today’s UpdateTuesday release and to clarify some details about the second vulnerability reported.

The attack was disclosed to us by our security partners and it’s the typical targeted attack exploited through a specific “drive-by” legitimate website that was compromised to include an additional piece of code added by the attackers. At the moment we have analyzed samples from the active attack that are targeting only older Internet Explorer versions running on Windows XP (IE7 and 8) because of the lack of additional security mitigations on those platforms (Windows 7 is affected but not under active attack). EMET was able to proactively mitigate this exploit.

The exploit was created combining two distinct vulnerabilities, but with different impact and severity ratings:

  1. a remote code execution vulnerability (CVE-2013-3918) in the InformationCardSigninHelper ActiveX component used by Internet Explorer;
  2. an information disclosure vulnerability (no CVE assigned yet) used by attackers only to improve the reliability of the exploit and to create ROP payloads specifically targeted for the victim’s machine;

The remote code execution vulnerability with higher severity rating will be fixed immediately in today’s Patch Tuesday and we advise customers to prioritize the deployment of MS13-090 for their monthly release. As usual, customers with Automatic Updates enabled will not need to take any action to receive the update and will be automatically protected.

The information disclosure vulnerability does not allow remote code execution and so it has a lower security rating since it will be typically used in combination with other high-severity bug (like it happened with CVE-2013-3918) to improve effectiveness of exploitation. Also, this vulnerability requires attackers to have prior knowledge of path and filenames present on targeted machines in order to be successfully exploited. This vulnerability was not used to bypass ASLR, but simply to remotely determine the exact version of a certain DLL on disk in order to build a more precise ROP payload (it’s a local information disclosure rather than a memory address disclosure).

We are still investigating the impact and root cause of the information disclosure vulnerability and we may follow up with additional information and mitigations as they become available.

Elia Florio – MSRC Engineering


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