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trendmicroblogElisa Lippincott (TippingPoint Global Product Marketing)TRENDMICROBLOG:6AD718FC3C384CF6470A9D6815A565D3
HistoryJul 07, 2017 - 3:45 p.m.

TippingPoint Threat Intelligence and Zero-Day Coverage – Week of July 3, 2017

2017-07-0715:45:09
Elisa Lippincott (TippingPoint Global Product Marketing)
blog.trendmicro.com
193

0.975 High

EPSS

Percentile

100.0%

It has been quoted by Albert Einstein, Benjamin Franklin, and others that insanity is “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” I could say that in our world of cyber security, despite all the headlines about data breaches and ransomware, there is no “insanity.” Products we used 25 years ago probably can’t protect against the latest malware. Someone will reverse-engineer someone’s code and ultimately figure out how to evade a product’s protection mechanisms for detecting or blocking an attack. Entire segments of the cyber security industry exist because there is no insanity. Those who create malware or tools that exploit bugs don’t do the exact same thing over and over again. Once we’ve figured them out, they adjust, and then we adjust by making our products smarter – until the cycle starts again.

When Stuxnet hit in 2010, it made headlines as a new kind of attack with massive geopolitical consequences. Microsoft released several different security patches in response, including MS10-046, to address the vulnerability in link files. Now, with the WikiLeaks documents exposure, it appears that a tool called “EZCheese” exploited a similar bug in link files until 2015. That tool change resulted from a set of bugs discovered through the Zero Day Initiative program that showed the original MS10-046 patch had failed. This forced a change of operational tactics to what was then an “unknown link file vulnerability” in Microsoft, which was likely corrected with the release of CVE-2017-8464. According to the WikiLeaks released documents, both EZCheese and its successor Brutal Kangaroo were designed to attack air-gapped networks similar to Stuxnet. You can learn more on Brutal Kangaroo and the impact the Zero Day Initiative has had on the industry by reading Brian Gorenc’s commentary on his blog: The Real-World Impact of Bug Bounties and Vulnerability Research.

Zero-Day Filters

There are 23 new zero-day filters covering six vendors in this week’s Digital Vaccine (DV) package. A number of existing filters in this week’s DV package were modified to update the filter description, update specific filter deployment recommendation, increase filter accuracy and/or optimize performance. You can browse the list of published advisories and upcoming advisories on the Zero Day Initiative website.

Adobe (3)

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  • 28916: ZDI-CAN-4887: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Adobe Acrobat Pro DC)
  • 28917: ZDI-CAN-4895: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Adobe Flash)
  • 28924: ZDI-CAN-4756: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Adobe Acrobat Pro DC)_ _
    —|—
    |

Foxit (1)

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  • 28921: ZDI-CAN-4518: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Foxit Reader)_ _
    —|—
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Hewlett Packard Enterprise (11)

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  • 28727: HTTPS: HPE Network Automation PermissionFilter Authentication Bypass Vulnerability (ZDI-17-332)
  • 28906: ZDI-CAN-4870: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Intelligent Management)
  • 28907: ZDI-CAN-4871: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Intelligent Management)
  • 28908: ZDI-CAN-4872: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Intelligent Management)
  • 28909: ZDI-CAN-4873: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Intelligent Management)
  • 28910: ZDI-CAN-4874: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Intelligent Management)
  • 28911: ZDI-CAN-4875: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Intelligent Management)
  • 28912: ZDI-CAN-4876: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Intelligent Management)
  • 28913: ZDI-CAN-4877: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Intelligent Management)
  • 28914: ZDI-CAN-4878: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Intelligent Management)
  • 28915: ZDI-CAN-4880: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Hewlett Packard Enterprise Intelligent Management)_ _
    —|—
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Microsoft (6)

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  • 28897: ZDI-CAN-4777: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Microsoft Edge)
  • 28918: ZDI-CAN-4886: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Microsoft Chakra)
  • 28919: ZDI-CAN-4888: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Microsoft Edge)
  • 28925: ZDI-CAN-4894: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Microsoft Chakra)
  • 28981: ZDI-CAN-4910: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Microsoft Chakra)
  • 28982: ZDI-CAN-4884: Zero Day Initiative Vulnerability (Microsoft Edge)_ _
    —|—
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Schneider Electric (1)

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  • 28920: HTTP: Schneider Electric U.motion Builder loadtemplate.php SQL Injection Vulnerability (ZDI-17-374)_ _
    —|—
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Trend Micro (1)

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  • 28900: HTTPS: Trend Micro InterScan Web Security delete_pac_files Command Injection (ZDI-17-229)_ _
    —|—
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Missed Last Week’s News?

Catch up on last week’s news in my weekly recap.