The Highlander Posted June 7, 2006 Report Share Posted June 7, 2006 IE And Firefox Sport New Zero-day Flaw Multiple security organizations warned Tuesday that Internet Explorer, Firefox, Mozilla, and SeaMonkey -- on Windows, Linux, and the Mac -- are vulnerable to a JavaScript bug that could allow a determined attacker to dupe users into giving up sensitive personal information such as credit card or bank account numbers and passwords. According to Symantec, which issued an alert late afternoon Tuesday, all versions of the Microsoft and Mozilla browsers could be used to harvest data through a JavaScript key-filtering vulnerability. "This issue is triggered by utilizing JavaScript 'OnKeyDown' events to capture and duplicate keystrokes from users," went the Symantec warning. The bug would let crafty criminals filter keystrokes entered into a form, say a credit card form to pay for online goods, to an invisible file upload dialog on the same Web page. Once the information's trapped in that hidden dialog -- the vulnerability discoverer used the analogy of the keystrokes "bouncing" from the legit (or at least legitimate-looking form) to the cloaked one -- the data could be sent to the attacker. "Exploiting this issue requires that users manually type the full path of files that attackers wish to download…[and] may require substantial typing from targeted users, so keyboard-based games, blogs, or other similar pages are likely to be utilized by attackers to entice users to enter the required keyboard input to exploit this issue," continued Symantec. Danish vulnerability tracker Secunia also posted warnings of the bug Tuesday, and ranked it as "less critical," the second-from-the-bottom rating in its five-step scoring system. The bug is unusual in that it affects not only Internet Explorer -- including fully-patched IE 6.0 and even IE 7 Beta 2 -- but also Firefox (though the most current version 1.5.0.4), the Mozilla suite, and the separately-developed successor to Mozilla, SeaMonkey. It's also out of the ordinary by virtue of its multi-platform impact: users of those browsers running Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X are vulnerable, said Symantec. Charles McAuley, who first posted information about the bug on the Full Disclosure security mailing list Monday, also published proof-of-concept code to demonstrate how an exploit might work. Symantec advised users to avoid unfamiliar Web neighborhoods and/or disable scripting or active content capabilities of the affected browsers. Full artical here Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest ivanatrox Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 IE And Firefox Sport New Zero-day Flaw The bug is unusual in that it affects not only Internet Explorer -- including fully-patched IE 6.0 and even IE 7 Beta 2 -- but also Firefox (though the most current version 1.5.0.4), the Mozilla suite, and the separately-developed successor to Mozilla, SeaMonkey. It's also out of the ordinary by virtue of its multi-platform impact: users of those browsers running Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X are vulnerable, said Symantec. it is unusual that it hits all platforms and all browsers but I guess it's the nature of the JavaScript... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Highlander Posted June 8, 2006 Author Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 it is unusual that it hits all platforms and all browsers but I guess it's the nature of the JavaScript... Every browser has java support, so id expect it to effect all of the browsers in some form if there is a java fault Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sterup2001 Posted June 14, 2006 Report Share Posted June 14, 2006 Firefox File Upload Form Keystroke Event Cancel Vulnerabilit http://forums.mozillazine.org/viewtopic.php?t=425636 Read this links abow and below https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56236 In version 3.0 it is fixed on the Trunk for Firefox 3.0. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=258875 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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