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Microsoft warns of 'important' Windows flaw
A flaw in Microsoft Corp.'s almost universally used Windows operating system could allow hackers to take control of a PC by luring users to a malicious Web site and coaxing them into clicking on a link, the company warned on Tuesday.
The security warning was rated "important," the second most serious on Microsoft's four-tiered rating scale for computer security threats. The highest is "critical."
Anti-virus software company Symantec Corp. called the vulnerability a "high risk" due to the impact the flaw could have if successfully exploited.
The security flaw affects the latest versions of Windows, including Windows XP, and software for networked computers such as Windows Server 2003, Microsoft said.
Vincent Gullotto, vice president of the anti-virus emergency response team at Network Associates Inc, said he did not believe the vulnerability was a high risk but said computer users should retrieve security patches from Microsoft's Web site.
Stephen Toulouse, a manager at Microsoft's Security Response Center, said that while the vulnerability would not allow for the automatic spread of a virus in the way the recent Sasser worm spread across global networks, it could still have serious consequences.
"The net result of an attack would be for an attacker to be able to do anything you already do on your computer," he said.
To exploit the vulnerability, an attacker would have to host a Web site that contains a Web page used to exploit the vulnerability and then persuade the user to visit the Web site and perform several actions before the attacker could take over a computer, Toulouse said.
The fast-moving Sasser computer worm hit PC users running the ubiquitous Microsoft Windows 2000, NT and XP operating systems a little over a week ago, afflicting computer users around the world by causing automatic reboots and slowing down Internet connections.
The suspected author of the Sasser worm was caught in Germany this past weekend.
Tuesday's security bulletin is the 15th issued so far this year by Microsoft, of which seven have identified "critical" flaws in its software. Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft issued 51 security bulletins in 2003.
Last year, Microsoft adopted a new monthly patch release program, which it said would let customers apply software fixes for security bugs more easily. |
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