Attackers have begun targeting an
unpatched
flaw in
Apple's
QuickTime
multimedia player.
The flaw was disclosed in November by independent researcher Kristian
Kloskowski, but exploits had existed only as non-malicious proof-of-concept
files until now.
Researchers at
Symantec
reported that an exploit for the vulnerability was discovered on a pornographic
website over the weekend. The security firm believes that other sites are also
serving the attack.
The vulnerability lies in the way QuickTime handles Real Time Streaming
Protocol (RTSP) data from streaming media files. A specially crafted file could
cause the player to crash and allow an attacker to remotely execute code.
Symantec said that attackers have placed the exploit on a separate site from
the page which triggers the attack.
When the user visits the pornographic site, a small iframe tag within the
HTML code redirects the user to the exploit site, which then launches the RTSP
attack and installs malware on the user's system.
Symantec urged users to turn their browsers to the highest security settings
and use a player other than QuickTime to run streaming media files. Advanced
users can also set their firewalls to block outgoing traffic from common RTSP
ports.
Apple has yet to release an update to patch the flaw. The company has a
policy of not commenting on security vulnerabilities until a fix has been
issued.
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