OpenOffice
users have been warned to be vigilant following the disclosure of three
vulnerabilities in the popular open source alternative to
Microsoft
Office.
Security firm
Secunia
classified the trio of vulnerabilities as 'highly critical', the company's
second-highest alert level.
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The vulnerabilities could be exploited to cause anything from a
denial-of-service attack to remote execution of code.
The first vulnerability lies in the StarCalc spreadsheet component of
OpenOffice. An attacker could use a specially-crafted StarCalc file to exploit
the vulnerability and remotely execute code on a user's system.
The second vulnerability, first reported by research firm
iDefense,
lies in the component of OpenOffice that handles WordPerfect (.wpd) files.
If a user can be persuaded to open a specially-crafted .wpd file, an exploit
could be triggered to allow an attacker to remotely execute malware, according
to an
iDefense
advisory.
The third vulnerability could allow an attacker to execute arbitrary shell
commands within OpenOffice.
Linux developer group
Debian said
that a user who clicked on a link within a specially-crafted document would be
vulnerable
to the attack.
Secunia has urged users to avoid opening suspicious OpenOffice files.
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