Peaches Posted October 18, 2009 Report Share Posted October 18, 2009 Mozilla Blacklists Microsoft's Vulnerable Firefox Plug-inThe .NET Framework Assistant clandestine extension also bannedBy Lucian Constantin, Web News Editor17th of October 2009Microsoft's recent Patch Tuesday addressed a remote code execution vulnerability affecting the Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) hosting process. Mozilla acted to protect its users by adding the Windows Presentation Foundation plug-in for Firefox to its blocklist, along with the .NET Framework Assistant extension.With Service Pack 1 update for Microsoft .NET Framework 3.5, released back in August 2008, Microsoft also added ClickOnce support for Firefox in the form of a Firefox extension called Microsoft .NET Framework Assistant. A related Windows Presentation Foundation plug-in has also been installed in the browser to support other .NET Framework features.These two add-ons were installed surreptitiously at machine level, without the user's consent, an action that at the time enraged many security-conscious Firefox users. This method of deployment also caused the Uninstall button for the .NET Framework Assistant extension to be grayed out, a problem that Microsoft later fixed.A remote code execution vulnerability discovered and presented at the Black Hat security conference by Mark Dowd, Ryan Smith, and David Dewey has been addressed as part of the MS09-054 security bulletin released on October 13. This bug can be exploited by tricking users into visiting a page that loads a maliciously-crafted XAML Browser Application (XBAP). Microsoft describes this as a browse-and-get-owned attack.The Redmond software giant stresses that both IE and Firefox users are protected if they deploy the patch contained in MS09-054, but this is not enough for the maintainers of addons.mozilla.org (AMO). The AMO team has decided to add both the Windows Presentation Foundation plug-in and the .NET Framework Assistant extension to the Add-ons Blocklist.This service is queried at predefined intervals by Mozilla products and the add-ons listed there are automatically disabled. “Microsoft .NET Framework Assistant and Windows Presentation Foundation, all versions, for all applications. Reason: remote code execution vulnerability,” a new entry that was added yesterday reads.Firefox users who had the Microsoft .NET Framework Assistant and/or Windows Presentation Foundation installed will be prompted with a warning dialog informing them that the two add-ons will be disabled due to security problems. The process will be complete after a browser restart, at which time clicking on their respective entries in the Add-ons window will read that they have been “Disabled for your protection.”Users who have not yet received the warning dialog and still have these add-ons enabled, can force the check manually. This is done by opening the Error Console (Tools > Error Console from the Firefox menu or Ctrl+Shift+J), pasting Components.classes['@mozilla.org/extensions/blocklist;1'].getService(Components.interfaces.nsITimerCallback).notify(null) into the console's Code field and pressing Evaluate.In addition, the Microsoft .NET Framework Assistant has also been removed from the official add-ons repository. The https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/9449 now says “Add-on not found” and redirects to the main page. The page is still accessible in search engine caches though.Softpedia - http://news.softpedia.com/news/Firefox-Bla...in-124597.shtml Quote Link to post Share on other sites
hitest Posted October 18, 2009 Report Share Posted October 18, 2009 Yeah, just noticed that yesterday on my toshiba xp netbook. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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