Microsoft to release IE update for critical vulnerabilities on Friday

Life

20 September 2012

Microsoft released a quick fix on Wednesday for a critical problem in its Internet Explorer browser and said a more permanent fix would be released on Friday.

The problem is particularly dangerous because it can be exploited by creating a malicious website that attacks visitors who use a vulnerable browser. Those browsers include IE6, IE7, IE8 and IE9. The only version not affected is IE10.

The one-click fix will protect computers immediately, wrote Yunsun Wee, director of Microsoft’s Trustworthy Computing group. On Friday, Microsoft will diverge from its normal patch schedule and issue a "cumulative update" for IE through its Windows Update service.

The cumulative update is named MS12-063 and will be released around 10 a.m. Pacific Time on Friday. It will also address four other critical, remote code execution vulnerabilities, Wee wrote.

 

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"We recommend that you install this update as soon as it is available," Wee wrote. "If you have automatic updates enabled on your PC, you won’t need to take any action — it will automatically be updated on your machine. This will not only reinforce the issue that the Fix It addressed, but cover other issues as well."

Microsoft will hold a live webcast at 12 p.m. Pacific Time on Friday to answer questions.

Microsoft normally issues patches on the second Tuesday of the month, but it issues an out-of-band update if a vulnerability is considered severe enough. The company said on Tuesday it had only seen a few attempts to exploit this vulnerability.

Security vendor AlienVault said it had discovered a second exploit using this IE vulnerability that installs a RAT (remote access tool) on victims’ computers. The first exploit, found last weekend, installed a RAT called Poison Ivy.

IDG News Service

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