Microsoft Confirms Unpatched Windows Kernel Flaw
One day after a Google security researcher releases code to expose a flaw that affects every release of the Windows NT kernel -- from Windows NT 3.1 (1993) up to and including Windows 7 (2009) -- Microsoft has released a security advisory to acknowledge the issue and warn of the risk of privilege escalation attacks.
Microsoft warns that a malicious hacker could exploit this vulnerability to run arbitrary code in kernel mode. For an attack to be successful, the attacker must have valid logon credentials..
The flaw does not affect Windows operating systems for x64-based and Itanium-based computers, Microsoft said.
According to Tavis Ormandy, the Google researcher who released the flaw details, Microsoft was notified about the issue in June 2009. After waiting several months and not seeing a patch, he decided it was in the best interest of everyone to go public.
As an effective and easy to deploy workaround is available, I have concluded that it is in the best interest of users to go ahead with the publication of this document without an official patch. It should be noted that very few users rely on NT security, the primary audience of this advisory is expected to be domain administrators and security professionals.
Ormandy's advisory includes instructions for temporarily disabling the MSDOS and WOWEXEC subsystems to prevent an attack from functioning. This can be done via Group Policy.
The mitigation in Microsoft's advisory mirrors the advice from Ormandy.
Commenting on this Article is closed.
Today's Most Popular
- Defense Contractor Northrop Grumman Hiring For Offensive Cyber Ops
- Iranian Students Claim to have Stolen Thousands of Researcher's Records
- Report: Diablo III Users Find Accounts Hacked, Gold Stolen And New 'Mystery' Friends
- Why Google Won't Protect You From Big Brother
- Forget 'Brogrammers,' Women Have The Edge In DEFCON Social Engineering Contest
Most Commented Stories
Newsletter Sign-up
Take Our Poll
Listen to Latest Podcasts
-
-
You are missing some Flash content that should appear here! Perhaps your browser cannot display it, or maybe it did not initialize correctly.
-
You are missing some Flash content that should appear here! Perhaps your browser cannot display it, or maybe it did not initialize correctly.




Comments
I'm not sure if I sure be worried this is breaking news or that Microsoft is just getting around to fixing this issue. Anybody who's done Malware research or develomet has known that using the 16bit unprotected DOS kernel is how privilege escalation has always been done.
Not sure why the press or securiy industry is getting whipped up about this. We've all known it for years. This is an old by-product of Intel forcing Microsoft to have backwards compatibility.