Headline
Largest Patch Tuesday since July includes two exploited in the wild, three critical vulnerabilities
The two vulnerabilities that Microsoft reports have been actively exploited in the wild and are publicly known are both rated as only being of “moderate” severity.
Tuesday, October 8, 2024 15:04
The largest Microsoft Patch Tuesday since July includes two vulnerabilities that have been exploited in the wild and three other critical issues across the company’s range of hardware and software offerings.
October’s monthly security update from Microsoft includes fixes for 117 CVEs, the most in a month since July’s updates covered 142 vulnerabilities.
The two vulnerabilities that Microsoft reports have been actively exploited in the wild and are publicly known are both rated as only being of “moderate” severity.
CVE-2024-43572 is a remote code execution vulnerability in the Microsoft Management Console that could allow an attacker to execute arbitrary code on the targeted machine. Microsoft’s security update will prevent untrusted Microsoft Saved Console (MSC) files from being opened to protect users against adversaries trying to exploit this vulnerability.
The security update will prevent untrusted Microsoft Saved Console (MSC) files from being opened to protect customers against the risks associated with this vulnerability.
The other vulnerability that was exploited in the wild in this week’s security update is CVE-2024-43573, a platform spoofing vulnerability in Windows MSHTML. Platform spoofing vulnerabilities usually allow an adversary to gain unauthorized access to an environment by disguising themselves as a trusted source.
CVE-2024-43583, an elevation of privilege vulnerability in Winlogon, has also been publicly disclosed, according to Microsoft, but has not yet been exploited in the wild. This vulnerability could allow an attacker to obtain SYSTEM-level privilege. In addition to applying the patch, Microsoft also recommends users enable a Microsoft first-party Input Method Editor (IME) on their devices to prevent adversaries from being able to exploit third-party IMEs during the sign-in process.
October’s Patch Tuesday also includes three critical vulnerabilities that could all lead to remote code execution.
CVE-2024-43468 is the most serious of this bunch, with a CVSS severity score of 9.8 out of 10. An attacker could exploit this vulnerability in Microsoft Configuration Manager to execute commands on the targeted server or underlying database.
Another remote code execution vulnerability, CVE-2024-43488, exists in the Visual Studio Code extension for Arduino, an open-source platform for building and managing single-board microcontrollers and microcontroller kits. A missing authentication protocol could allow an adversary to execute remote code over the network.
Microsoft stated that the company has already mitigated this vulnerability and users do not need to take any additional steps. This extension has also been deprecated and can no longer be downloaded from the internet.
Lastly, CVE-2024-43582 exists in the Windows Remote Desktop Protocol server and could allow an attacker to execute code on the server side with the same permissions as the RPC service. An adversary could exploit this vulnerability by sending malformed packets to an RPC host. However, exploitation also requires that the adversary win a race condition first.
Cisco Talos would also like to highlight several vulnerabilities that are only rated as “important,” but Microsoft lists as “more likely” to be exploited:
- CVE-2024-43502: Elevation of privilege vulnerability in Windows Kernel
- CVE-2024-43509 and CVE-2024-43556: Elevation of privilege vulnerabilities in Windows Graphics Component
- CVE-2024-43560: Elevation of privilege vulnerability in Windows Storage Port
- CVE-2024-43581 and CVE-2024-43615: Remote code execution vulnerability in Microsoft OpenSSH for Windows
- CVE-2024-43609: Spoofing vulnerability in Microsoft Office
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 64083 - 64086, 64089, 64090, 64111 and 64112. There are also Snort 3 rules 301034 - 301036 and 301041.
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What is known about the Spoofing – Windows MSHTML Platform (CVE-2024-43573) vulnerability from the October Microsoft Patch Tuesday? In fact, just that it is being exploited in the wild. There are no write-ups or public exploits yet. The Acknowledgements section in the Microsoft bulletin is empty. It is not clear who reported it and from […]
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Microsoft has released security updates to fix a total of 118 vulnerabilities across its software portfolio, two of which have come under active exploitation in the wild. Of the 118 flaws, three are rated Critical, 113 are rated Important, and two are rated Moderate in severity. The Patch Tuesday update doesn't include the 25 additional flaws that the tech giant addressed in its Chromium-based
Microsoft today released security updates to fix at least 117 security holes in Windows computers and other software, including two vulnerabilities that are already seeing active attacks. Also, Adobe plugged 52 security holes across a range of products, and Apple has addressed a bug in its new macOS 15 "Sequoia" update that broke many cybersecurity tools.
Microsoft today released security updates to fix at least 117 security holes in Windows computers and other software, including two vulnerabilities that are already seeing active attacks. Also, Adobe plugged 52 security holes across a range of products, and Apple has addressed a bug in its new macOS 15 "Sequoia" update that broke many cybersecurity tools.
Threat actors are actively exploiting two of the vulnerabilities, while three others are publicly known and ripe for attack.