[<prev] [next>] [day] [month] [year] [list]
Message-ID: <1009052589.20060509142359@SECURITY.NNOV.RU>
Date: Tue May 9 11:24:12 2006
From: 3APA3A at SECURITY.NNOV.RU (3APA3A)
Subject: ICQ Client Cross-Application Scripting (XAS)
QQLan QQlan@...dex.ru reported vulnerability in multiple versions of ICQ
Inc.' ICQ instant messenger client in a way it interacts with Microsoft
Internet Explorer.
Author: QQlan <QQlan@...dex.ru>
Title: ICQ Client Cross-Application Scripting (XAS)
Vendor: ICQ Inc.
Application: ICQ
Versions: up to and including 5.04 build 2321
Vulnerability class: man-in-the-middle, against client
Vulnerability type: cross application scripting (My Computer zone)
Risk level: low (high, if unsecured shared network is used)
Intro:
ICQ is probably most popular instant messaging application by ICQ Inc.
Description:
Under some conditions, ICQ client is vulnerable to remote script injection into
My Computer Security Zone of Internet Explorer component used to display
advertisement banners.
Detailed description:
<quote src=http://www.security.nnov.ru/Jdocument327.html>
Cross application scripting (XAS) is possible when an application
executes data in a security context different from the original content
(presumably one with less security restrictions). For example the data
may be obtained from an un-trusted source (a remote web server) that is
sent unfiltered into a trusted application such as when web content is
downloaded from a remote server, and then re-displayed on the local
host. Any application that downloads and then later displays and
executes web content (such as JavaScript) may be vulnerable to XAS.
</quote>
ICQ Client has very annoying advertising function. Banners are displayed
inside Internet Explorer COM object embedded into main window, ?Welcome
Screen? and every ?Message Session? dialogs. Under some condition
attacker can replace HTML content in this forms with malicious script
which will be executed in My Computer security zone of Internet
Explorer.
Technical information will be published (three months maybe years later)
after vendor provide a patch.
Workaround:
1. Press Ctrl+Shift+Esc
2. In File/Run menu type cmd.exe
3. In cmd.exe console type
echo 127.0.0.1 ar.atwola.com >> %SystemRoot%\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
Disclosure timeline:
5/2005 Vulnerability discovered
4/2006 Last attempt to contact vendor
5/2006 Public disclosure
--
/3APA3A
http://www.security.nnov.ru/
Powered by blists - more mailing lists