The following is a Security Bulletin from the Microsoft Product Security Notification Service. Please do not reply to this message, as it was sent from an unattended mailbox. ******************************** -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- - ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Title: 13 November 2001 Cumulative Patch for IE Released: 08 November 2001 Revised: 13 November 2001 (version 2.0) Software: Internet Explorer Impact: Exposure and altering of data in cookies Max Risk: Moderate Bulletin: MS01-055 Microsoft encourages customers to review the Security Bulletin at: http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS01-055.asp. - ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Reason for Revision: ==================== On November 08, 2001, Microsoft released the original version of this bulletin. In it, we detailed a work-around procedure that customers could implement to protect themselves against a publicly disclosed vulnerability. On November 13, 2001, we released a patch that, when applied, eliminates all known vulnerabilities affecting IE 5.5 and IE 6. We therefore expanded the scope of the bulletin to discuss all of the vulnerabilities the patch addresses. Customers who disabled Active Scripting per the original version of this bulletin can re-enable it after installing this patch. Issue: ====== In addition to eliminating all previously discussed vulnerabilities affecting IE 5.5 Service Pack 2 and IE 6, the patch also eliminates three newly discovered ones: The first two involve how IE handles cookies across domains. Although the underlying flaws are completely unrelated, the scope is exactly the same - in each case, a malicious user could potentially craft a URL that would allow them to gain unauthorized access to a user's cookies and potentially modify the values contained in them. Because some web sites store sensitive information in a user's cookies, this could allow personal information to be compromised. Both vulnerabilities could be exploited either by hosting specially crafted URL's on a web page or by sending them to the victim in an HTML email. The third vulnerability is a new variant of a vulnerability discussed in Microsoft Security Bulletin MS01-051 affecting how IE handles URLs that include dotless IP addresses. If a web site were specified using a dotless IP format (e.g., http://031713501415 rather than http://207.46.131.13), and the request were malformed in a particular way, IE would not recognize that the site was an Internet site. Instead, it would treat the site as an intranet site, and open pages on the site in the Intranet Zone rather than the correct zone. This would allow the site to run with fewer security restrictions than appropriate. This vulnerability does not affect IE 6. Mitigating Factors: ==================== Cookie Handling Vulnerabilities: - To exploit either vulnerability, the attacker would need to entice the user into visiting a particular web site or opening an HTML e-mail containing the malformed URL. - The Outlook Email Security Update (which is included as part of Outlook 2002 in Office XP) would protect the user against the mail-borne attack scenario. - Users who have set Outlook Express to use the "Restricted Sites" Zone are not affected by the mail-borne attack scenario, because the "Restricted Sites" zone sets Active Scripting to disabled. Note that this is the default setting for Outlook Express 6.0. Users of Outlook Express 6.0 should verify that Active Scripting is still disabled in the Restricted Sites Zone. Zone Spoofing Vulnerability: - The default settings in the Intranet Zone differ in only a few ways from those of the Internet Zone. The differences are enumerated in the FAQ in MS01-051, but none would allow destructive action to be taken. Patch Availability: =================== - A patch is available to fix this vulnerability. Please read the Security Bulletin at http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms01-055.asp for information on obtaining this patch. Acknowledgment: =============== - Marc Slemko for reporting one of the cookie handling issues. - --------------------------------------------------------------------- THE INFORMATION PROVIDED IN THE MICROSOFT KNOWLEDGE BASE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. 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