Internet Explorer is reeling from yet another zero-day exploit, this time
causing the browser to crash or tricking users into visiting a malicious web
page.
The new exploit, which was published to the BugTraq mailing list at the
weekend, affects Internet Explorer 6 and 7, according to Symantec researchers.
Symantec said that the malware exhibits signs of "poor reliability", but that
a "fully-functional reliable exploit" is likely to be available soon.
The issue is caused by a memory corruption error in the Microsoft HTML Viewer
when retrieving certain CSS/STYLE objects, explained researchers from
vulnerability research firm Vupen Security in a
security
advisory.
This could allow attackers to crash an affected browser or execute arbitrary
code by tricking a user into visiting a malicious web page, the firm added.
Symantec said in a
blog
post that a successful attack would require the attacker to "lure victims to
their malicious web page or a web site they have compromised".
"To minimise the chances of being affected by this issue, Internet Explorer
users should ensure their anti-virus definitions are up to date, disable
JavaScript and only visit web sites they trust until fixes are available from
Microsoft."
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