Microsoft Word Vulnerability

Published: 2006-05-20. Last Updated: 2006-05-21 02:05:23 UTC
by Koon Yaw Tan (Version: 1)
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Most anti-virus vendors have already come out with signatures to detect the malware exploiting MS Word vulnerability. By now, I hope you have got all your AV signatures updated. Although relying on virus scanner is not totally full proof (especially on new variants), but it is better than none (remember defense-in-depth).

At your firewall and IDS, you may want to monitor outbound traffic going to these domains, as this may be an indication of compromised hosts:

3322.org
scfzf.xicp.net

If you are filtering Word attachment at your gateway, it should be based on Word file type and not just on file extension alone.

US CERT has released an security alert on Microsoft Word Vulnerability

Below are stories from ISC on this topic. We will update as we have more detailed information.

Word 0-day, recommended defenses

Targeted attack: Word exploit
- More AV vendor links have been added.

Targeted attack: experience from the trenches

(Update)
Miscrosoft has put up a new article on A quick check-in on the Word vulnerability (Thanks Juha-Matti). Part of the article is extracted below:

First off on the vulnerability itself: I want to reiterate we're hard at work on an update.  The attack vector here is Word documents attached to an email or otherwise delivered to a user's computer.  The user would have to open it first for anything to happen.  That information isn't meant to say the issue isn't serious, it's just meant to clearly denote the scope of the threat.

Now, we've received singular reports of attacks and have been working directly with the couple of customers thus far affected.  In analyzing the malware we've added detection to the Windows Live Safety Center, and we've passed all that information over to our antivirus partners.  But in breaking down the current malware we discovered some commonality to the current attack.  The attack we've seen is email based.  The emails tend to arrive in groups, they often have fake domains that are similar to real domains of the targets, but the targets are valid email addresses. 

Currently two of the subject lines we have seen are: 

Notice
RE Plan for final agreement

The attack we have seen so far requires admin rights, so limitations on user accounts can help here.  I want to repeat that customers who believe they are affected can contact Product Support Services.  You can contact Product Support Services in North America for help with security update issues or viruses at no charge using the PC Safety line (1866-PCSAFETY) and international customers by using any method found at this location:

http://support.microsoft.com/security.

So far, this is a *very* limited attack, and most of our antivirus partners are rating this as "low".  But we're working to investigate any variants we might see to make sure detection is out there, as well as working on the update to address the vulnerability.


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