Java Flaw Targeted By Crimeware Toolkit: Patch Now

Don't wait on this update, Java 7 users. Exploit uses bug, patched by Oracle last week, to execute arbitrary code.

Mathew J. Schwartz, Contributor

April 24, 2013

3 Min Read

Java 7 users: Have you updated to the latest version of the software, released last week by Oracle?

Anyone who isn't using Java 7 update 21, released last Tuesday, is at risk of being exploited via active attacks that target one or more Java browser plug-in vulnerabilities patched by Oracle.

Related attacks began Sunday, according to a brief research note published by security firm F-Secure. That's just five days after Oracle released the update, which included fixes for 42 vulnerabilities -- 39 of which could be remotely exploited without authentication -- as well as a new malicious Java application warning system.

One of the patched vulnerabilities (CVE-2013-2423) could be used to disable the Java security manager and run arbitrary code outside of the Java sandbox, according to Jeroen Frijters, the lead developer of the IKVM.NET project -- which maintains a Java virtual machine implemented in .NET. Frijters advertises himself as an "accidental security researcher."

[ Learn why security experts say Oracle is making good decisions. Read Oracle Delays Java 8 To Improve Java 7 Security. ]

By Saturday, an exploit for the flaw discovered by Frijters had been added to the open source vulnerability testing toolkit Metasploit, in the form of a new module.

"The vulnerability affects Java version 7u17 and earlier," said security researcher Eric Romang in a blog post. "This exploit doesn't bypass click-to-play, so the user must accept the java warning in order to run the malicious applet."

To date, the vulnerability appears to have been targeted via one or more crimeware exploits kits, but it's not yet clear which ones. F-Secure anti-malware analyst Timo Hirvonen Tuesday tweeted: "New Java exploit for CVE-2013-2423 has been introduced to RedKit."

But shortly thereafter, he noted that "it seems our automation identified the kit incorrectly" and tweeted: "We still need to work on identifying the exploit kit that introduced CVE-2013-2423. Looks like it might be CrimeBoss instead of RedKit."

CrimeBoss is an exploit toolkit that, after being loaded onto a website that's been compromised by an attacker, attempts to infect website visitors via malicious iFrames. While the toolkit is designed to exploit Java vulnerabilities "by faking the Java(TM) Platform SE Auto Updater," according to the Malware Must Die! blog, "even without Java you can get infected too."

RedKit, meanwhile, is a Russian-language toolkit that competes with the BlackHole and Phoenix crimeware packs, and which has often been loaded up with the latest Java exploits by its developers. RedKit is loaded onto compromised websites and targets browsers via drive-by attacks. The toolkit was used in February, for example, to infect visitors to the NBC.com website with malware such as Citadel.

Despite the release of Java 7 update 21 last week and fixes for dozens of bugs, Adam Gowdiak, CEO of Polish security research firm Security Explorations, said Monday that he'd already discovered a new, exploitable vulnerability in the update, which affects both the Java browser plug-in client as well as the all-new Server Java Runtime Environment (JRE).

According to the security firm's vendor status website page, two other flaws that the company reported to Oracle -- backed with proof-of-concept exploit code -- in the past two months are being "fixed in main codeline" or are still under investigation.

People are your most vulnerable endpoint. Make sure your security strategy addresses that fact. Also in the new, all-digital How Hackers Fool Your Employees issue of Dark Reading: Effective security doesn't mean stopping all attackers. (Free registration required.)

About the Author(s)

Mathew J. Schwartz

Contributor

Mathew Schwartz served as the InformationWeek information security reporter from 2010 until mid-2014.

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