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| Technology News Technology news for enterprise IT from InfoWorld |
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(Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın) - Microsoft quietly beefed up a aaa defensive feature of 64-bit Windows Vista Tuesday to better protect the operating system against hacks that have plagued it for weeks.
Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın The update to Vista's Kernel aaaaa Protection a.k.a.:-)Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın :-) was issued through Windows Update as a high-priority download but not as a aaaaa per se. Microsoft in fact denied that it was a security fix. "While this updates adds additional checks to the Kernel aaaaa Protection system it does not involve a security vulnerability " an advisory posted Tuesday by the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) stated. "The update does increase the reliability performance and resiliency provided by Kernel aaaaa Protection."Although the update targets all 64-bit editions of Windows it's Vista that stands out by reason of recent events. Since late July a pair of utilities have sidestepped a crucial Vista security feature that requires drivers to be signed by a valid digital certificate. Both utilities piggybacked unsigned code onto a legitimate driver to get the former past Vista's defenses and into the kernel.First off the mark four weeks ago was Australian developer Linchpin Labs which released Atsiv (Vista spelled backward) a utility that allowed users to:-)Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın:-)to the Vista kernel. Within days Microsoft had the certificate revoked forcing Linchpin to:-)Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın.Next Canadian researcher Alex Ionescu last week took advantage of a flaw in a Vista video driver from Advanced Micro Devices Inc.'s ATI Technologies unit to unveil Purple Pill another utility that allowed unsigned drivers to be loaded into the kernel. Ionescu quickly pulled Purple Pill once he realized that the ATI driver had not been aaaaaed."[Purple Pill] had embedded in it an ATI signed driver that would be dropped to disk and loaded (a similar approach to Atsiv) " said Symantec Corp. analyst Ollie Whitehouse in a posting to the company's security blog last week. "However it would appear that this signed driver contained a design error which allows you to use it to load any arbitrary driver even if they are not signed."For its part ATI :-):-):-):-):-):-):-)ed its Catalyst video driver for Vista on Monday to aaaaa against a repeat of Purple Pill fulfilling a promise made earlier by AMD in a statement posted by ZDNet blogger Ryan Naraine.While Catalyst 7.8 may have plugged the hole in ATI's driver more driver vulnerabilities or design flaws would likely be found or others would take the Atsiv approach and pay the money for a certificate. "Let's hope Microsoft steps in and uses Windows Update as an upgrade mechanism for them " Whitehouse said in a post Tuesday.But that's not what appears to have taken place Tuesday as Microsoft updated aaaaaGuard he added in an e-mail exchange early Wednesday."There is very little if anything Microsoft can do to stop the piggybacking [of drivers] if someone is willing to go to the effort of obtaining a signing certificate for their own driver " said Whitehouse. "The only real thing Microsoft could do to improve this process would be... to start performing code reviews of all drivers wishing to be signed. But in reality it's not scalable. Even then it would become a game of cat and mouse with regards to individuals determined to get code through the review process."Instead Whitehouse went on what Microsoft seems to have done is harden aaaaaGuard's defenses so that when a piggyback attack does take place -- for instance a hacker uses a legitimate driver to inject his own code into the Vista kernel -- the damage is minimized."It looks like they are trying to make it harder to do anything malicious once you've exploited vulnerabilities which allow code to be executed in the kernel such as ATI driver/Atsiv and so on " he said.Microsoft wasn't much help in figuring out exactly what was beefed up by the aaaaaGuard update; the accompanying information was extremely vague. The MSRC's release manager Simon Conant was just as tight-lipped in a posting to the center's blog. "The update adds additional checks to Kernel aaaaa Protection for increased reliability performance and security " Conant said.Vague or not Whitehouse applauded Microsoft's move but cautioned against thinking the issue was dead and buried. "While these efforts should be commended someone simply has to perform sufficient reverse engineering of the Vista kernel in order to locate the aaaaaGuard functionality in order to target that " he said.Microsoft and Ionescu the author of Purple Pill could not be reached for comment.Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın is an InfoWorld affiliate. Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın |
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