Security researchers have published details of three flaws in Apple's iCal
application after waiting over four months for the company to issue a fix.
Researchers at Core Security discovered the bugs in the calendar application
in January and promptly informed Apple of the flaws.
"Three vulnerabilities in iCal may allow un-authenticated attackers to
execute arbitrary code on vulnerable systems with (and potentially without)
assistance from the end user," said Core Security in a
posting
to the Bugtraq mailing list.
"They could also repeatedly execute a denial of service attack to crash the
iCal application.
"The most serious of the three vulnerabilities is due to potential memory
corruption resulting from a resource liberation bug that can be triggered with a
malformed .ics calendar file specially crafted by a would-be attacker."
Apple originally promised to publish fixes by March, then by April. But,
after repeated delays and denials that there was a problem, Core Security went
public with the information so that users could protect their information.
The company informed Apple of the decision ahead of time but fixes have yet
to be released.
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