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Microsoft security patch was seven years in the making[2008/11/12]
[TextSizeBig Middle Small][Print]


A fix for a security issue in its SMB service was released Tuesday


back to March 2001, when a hacker named Josh Buchbinder (a.k.a Sir Dystic) published code showing how the attack worked.


Symantec Research Manager Ben Greenbaum said the flaw may have first been disclosed at Defcon 2000, by Veracode Chief Scientist Christien Rioux (a.k.a. Dildog)


Whoever discovered the flaw, Microsoft seems to have taken an unusually long time to fix the bug.


"This is definitely out of the ordinary," Greenbaum said. He said he did not know why Microsoft had waited so long to fix the issue.


"I've been holding my breath since 2001 for this patch," said shaclik Technologies Chief Technology Officer Eric Schultze, in an e-mailed statement. Buchbinder's attack, called a SMB relay attack, "showed how easy it was to take control of a remote machine without knowing the password," he said.
For the attack to work, a victim could be sent a malicious e-mail message that, when opened, would try to connect to a server run by the attacker. That machine would then steal network authentication credentials from the victim, which could then be used to gain access to the victim's machine.


This type of attack would be blocked by a firewall, so a hacker would have to already be on a computer within the network in order to launch the SMB relay. Microsoft rates the flaw as "important" for Windows XP, 2000 and Server 2003 users, and as "moderate" for Vista and Server 2008.


Nevertheless Schultze said he considered the patch "critical" for machines on a corporate network.


He said the attack is "pretty easy" to pull off today. "It's a great vector of attack on a corporate network where file and print sharing ports and services may be unprotected," he said.


Microsoft representatives were unable to comment for this story Tuesday afternoon.