Reports surfaced today of a vulnerability in
Microsoft's
Internet Explorer that is actively being exploited by cyber-criminals to install
and run malware on affected systems.
Sunbelt
Software first detected the attacks, which appear to be linked to a group of
adult websites hosted in Russia.
Secunia
has given the vulnerability a rating of 'extremely critical', its highest alert
level. The security vendor suggests that users deactivate active scripting and
only view trusted sites, avoiding unsolicited or suspicious links.
Sunbelt recommended that disabling JavaScript may also help to mitigate the
attacks.
The attack exploits a vulnerability in Internet Explorer's
Vector
Markup Language (VML), a software component used to display images.
It is launched when the user views a specially crafted web page encoded with
the VML exploit that allows the attacker to remotely execute code without the
user's knowledge.
A spokesman for Microsoft confirmed the reports to
vnunet.com
and said that a fix is scheduled to be released as part of the company's next
security update due on 10 October.
News of the VML exploit comes just days after another
highly
critical vulnerability was found in the browser's ActiveX component that
could allow for remote code execution. No evidence exists that attackers are
actively exploiting this flaw.
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