An unusual browser attack has been found in which
Microsoft's
Internet Explorer
can be used to activate
Mozilla's
Firefox and run
malicious code.
The zero-day flaw uses a protocol handler that Firefox puts on the computer
when it installs to handle 'firefoxurl://' commands.
If Internet Explorer is used on a page that tries to use the 'firefoxurl://'
the browser will activate Firefox automatically and allow malicious code to be
run in JavaScript.
The flaw was found by security researcher
Thor
Larholm and published on his blog. No patch currently exists to deal with
the problem.
"While Mozilla is currently working on a fix, organisations need to take a
proactive approach to mitigate risk to the network by alerting users to be
careful when browsing the web and only visit trusted sites," said Paul Zimski,
senior director of market strategy at
Patchlink.
"Companies should be handling active scripting inside the Java browser to
limit users visiting infected sites.
"While there are three critical patches that IT administrators have to deal
with today, companies should prioritise and deploy the fix immediately for this
exploit when it is released."
There is some confusion over which company should be providing a patch for
this flaw.
Secunia lists
it as a Firefox flaw while
SecurityFocus
sees it as an Internet Explorer problem.
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