India Needs Better Cybersecurity for Space, Critical Infrastructure

As attacks on satellites rise with nation-state conflicts, the South Asian nation joins other space-capable countries in doubling down on cybersecurity.

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Opus Security Elevates Vulnerability Management With its AI-Powered Multi-Layered Prioritization Engine

Palo Alto, USA/California, 11th September 2024, CyberNewsWire

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Microsoft September 2024 Patch Tuesday Fixes 79 Flaws, Including 4 Zero-Days

Microsoft’s September 2024 Patch Tuesday is here. Make sure you’ve applied the necessary patches!

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Microsoft Discloses 4 Zero-Days in September Update

This month’s Patch Tuesday contains a total of 79 vulnerabilities — the fourth largest of the year.

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Bug Left Some Windows PCs Dangerously Unpatched

Microsoft Corp. today released updates to fix at least 79 security vulnerabilities in its Windows operating systems and related software, including multiple flaws that are already showing up in active attacks. Microsoft also corrected a critical bug that has caused some Windows 10 PCs to remain dangerously unpatched against actively exploited vulnerabilities for several months this year.

By far the most curious security weakness Microsoft disclosed today has the snappy name of CVE-2024-43491, which Microsoft says is a vulnerability that led to the rolling back of fixes for some vulnerabilities affecting “optional components” on certain Windows 10 systems produced in 2015. Those include Windows 10 systems that installed the monthly security update for Windows released in March 2024, or other updates released until August 2024.

Satnam Narang, senior staff research engineer at Tenable, said that while the phrase “exploitation detected” in a Microsoft advisory normally implies the flaw is being exploited by cybercriminals, it appears labeled this way with CVE-2024-43491 because the rollback of fixes reintroduced vulnerabilities that were previously know to be exploited.

“To correct this issue, users need to apply both the September 2024 Servicing Stack Update and the September 2024 Windows Security Updates,” Narang said.

Kev Breen, senior director of threat research at Immersive Labs, said the root cause of CVE-2024-43491 is that on specific versions of Windows 10, the build version numbers that are checked by the update service were not properly handled in the code.

“The notes from Microsoft say that the ‘build version numbers crossed into a range that triggered a code defect’,” Breen said. “The short version is that some versions of Windows 10 with optional components enabled was left in a vulnerable state.”

Zero Day #1 this month is CVE-2024-38226, and it concerns a weakness in Microsoft Publisher, a standalone application included in some versions of Microsoft Office. This flaw lets attackers bypass Microsoft’s “Mark of the Web,” a Windows security feature that marks files downloaded from the Internet as potentially unsafe.

Zero Day #2 is CVE-2024-38217, also a Mark of the Web bypass affecting Office. Both zero-day flaws rely on the target opening a booby-trapped Office file.

Security firm Rapid7 notes that CVE-2024-38217 has been publicly disclosed via an extensive write-up, with exploit code also available on GitHub.

According to Microsoft, CVE-2024-38014, an “elevation of privilege” bug in the Windows Installer, is also being actively exploited.

June’s coverage of Microsoft Patch Tuesday was titled “Recall Edition,” because the big news then was that Microsoft was facing a torrent of criticism from privacy and security experts over “Recall,” a new artificial intelligence (AI) feature of Redmond’s flagship Copilot+ PCs that constantly takes screenshots of whatever users are doing on their computers.

At the time, Microsoft responded by suggesting Recall would no longer be enabled by default. But last week, the software giant clarified that what it really meant was that the ability to disable Recall was a bug/feature in the preview version of Copilot+ that will not be available to Windows customers going forward. Translation: New versions of Windows are shipping with Recall deeply embedded in the operating system.

It’s pretty rich that Microsoft, which already collects an insane amount of information from its customers on a near constant basis, is calling the Recall removal feature a bug, while treating Recall as a desirable feature. Because from where I sit, Recall is a feature nobody asked for that turns Windows into a bug (of the surveillance variety).

When Redmond first responded to critics about Recall, they noted that Recall snapshots never leave the user’s system, and that even if attackers managed to hack a Copilot+ PC they would not be able to exfiltrate on-device Recall data.

But that claim rang hollow after former Microsoft threat analyst Kevin Beaumont detailed on his blog how any user on the system (even a non-administrator) can export Recall data, which is just stored in an SQLite database locally.

As it is apt to do on Microsoft Patch Tuesday, Adobe has released updates to fix security vulnerabilities in a range of products, including Reader and Acrobat, After Effects, Premiere Pro, Illustrator, ColdFusion, Adobe Audition, and Photoshop. Adobe says it is not aware of any exploits in the wild for any of the issues addressed in its updates.

Seeking a more detailed breakdown of the patches released by Microsoft today? Check out the SANS Internet Storm Center’s thorough list. People responsible for administering many systems in an enterprise environment would do well to keep an eye on AskWoody.com, which often has the skinny on any wonky Windows patches that may be causing problems for some users.

As always, if you experience any issues applying this month’s patch batch, consider dropping a note in the comments here about it.

 

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Patch Tuesday for September 2024: Microsoft Catches Four Zero-Day Vulnerabilities

A Mark of the Web security alert vulnerability and three others have been exploited in the wild and are now covered by Redmond’s monthly patch batch.

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Cyber Staffing Shortages Remain CISOs’ Biggest Challenge

Besides operational issues connected to a talent shortage, the cost of running security platforms — and their training costs — also keeps CISOs up at night.

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Four zero-days included in group of 79 vulnerabilities Microsoft discloses, including one with 9.8 severity score

Microsoft disclosed four vulnerabilities that are actively being exploited in the wild as part of its regular Patch Tuesday security update this week in what’s become a regular occurrence for the company’s patches in 2024. 

Two of the zero-day vulnerabilities, CVE-2024-38226 and CVE-2024-38014, exist in the Microsoft Publisher software and Windows Installer, respectively. Last month, Microsoft disclosed six vulnerabilities in its Patch Tuesday that were already being exploited in the wild.  

In all, September’s monthly round of patches from Microsoft included 79 vulnerabilities, seven of which are considered critical. In addition to the zero-days disclosed Tuesday, Microsoft also fixed a security issue that had already been publicly disclosed: CVE-2024-38217, a vulnerability in Windows Mark of the Web that could allow an adversary to bypass usual MOTW detection techniques.  

Cisco Talos’ Vulnerability Research team also discovered an information disclosure vulnerability in the AllJoyn API that could allow an adversary to access uninitialized memory. CVE-2024-38257 is considered “less likely” to be exploited, though it does not require any user interaction or user privileges.  

The most serious of the issues included in September’s Patch Tuesday is CVE-2024-43491, which has a severity score of 9.8 out of 10. CVE-2024-43491, a remote code execution issue in Windows Update, is considered “more likely” to be exploited, though Microsoft disclosed few details about the nature of this vulnerability. 

There are also four remote code execution vulnerabilities in SharePoint Server that are also considered “more likely” to be exploited: CVE-2024-38018, CVE-2024-38227, CVE-2024-38228 and CVE-2024-43464

In the case of the latter three vulnerabilities, an authenticated attacker with Site Owner permissions can inject arbitrary code and execute code in the context of SharePoint Server. However, an attacker only needs to have Site Member permissions to exploit CVE-2024-38018. 

CVE-2024-38226, one of the zero-days disclosed this week, is a security feature bypass vulnerability in Microsoft Publisher that could allow an attacker to bypass the default Microsoft Office macro policies used to block untrusted or malicious files. An adversary could exploit this vulnerability by tricking a user into opening a specially crafted, malicious file in Microsoft Publisher, which could lead to a local attack on the victim’s machine. Macros have been blocked by default on Office software to prevent attackers from hiding malicious code in them.  

Another vulnerability being actively exploited in the wild, CVE-2024-38014, is an issue in Windows Installer that could allow an adversary to gain SYTEM-level privileges. This issue affects Windows 11, version 24H2, which is currently only available on certain Microsoft Copilot+ devices, among other older versions of Windows 10 and 11. 

A complete list of all the other vulnerabilities Microsoft disclosed this month is available on its update page

In response to these vulnerability disclosures, Talos is releasing a new Snort rule set that detects attempts to exploit some of them. Please note that additional rules may be released at a future date and current rules are subject to change pending additional information. Cisco Security Firewall customers should use the latest update to their ruleset by updating their SRU. Open-source Snort Subscriber Rule Set customers can stay up to date by downloading the latest rule pack available for purchase on Snort.org

The rules included in this release that protect against the exploitation of many of these vulnerabilities are 63979 – 63984 and 63987 – 63994. There are also Snort 3 rules 301008 – 301013.

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London’s transit agency drops claim it has ‘no evidence’ of customer data theft after hack

The London transport authority removes a claim that said there was no evidence that customer data was compromised during a recent hack.

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Microsoft Says Windows Update Zero-Day Being Exploited to Undo Security Fixes

Patch Tuesday: Microsoft raises an alarm for in-the-wild exploitation of a critical flaw in Windows Update.

The post Microsoft Says Windows Update Zero-Day Being Exploited to Undo Security Fixes appeared first on SecurityWeek.

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