Microsoft rushes out fix to prevent attacks on Office PCs
Microsoft rushes out fix to prevent attacks on Office PCs
(Reuters) - Microsoft Corp released an emergency software
fix on Tuesday after it learned that hackers had exploited a previously
undiscovered security flaw in its widely used Office software to infect
the PCs of its customers with tainted Word documents.
The software
maker said on its website that it had released the software, known as a
"Fix It," as a temporary measure until it provides an update that will
automatically patch computers to protect against the new threat.
Microsoft
said that it had learned of a "very limited" number of attacks that
exploited the newly discovered vulnerability, mainly in the Middle East
and South Asia. The company did not identify the victims, who received
emails asking them to open the tainted Word documents.
The
vulnerability affects customers using Office 2003 and Office 2007 as
well as those running Office 2010 on Windows XP and Server 2003.
The
attacks took advantage of an undiscovered flaw, or "zero day"
vulnerability in industry parlance, which is usually only used on a
limited number of high-value targets in a bid to keep the flaws a
secret.
Typically, when makers of
widely used software programs issue a warning about a zero-day bug,
groups of hackers rush to reverse-engineer the Fix Its so they can build
computer viruses that also exploit the same vulnerabilities.
Stuart
McClure, chief executive officer of the cybersecurity firm Cylance Inc,
said that businesses using vulnerable versions of Office should install
the Fix It to prevent attacks.
"I definitely think it is something that needs to be patched," he said.
Fix
Its are pieces of software for remediating security flaws that must be
manually downloaded and installed on PCs. They are designed to protect
customers while Microsoft prepares official updates, automatically delivered via the Internet to be installed on computers.
The new Fix It is available at this link: here
No comments:
Post a Comment