Internet Explorer 6 Security Update 11th February!

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Microsoft just released their latest Security Bulletin MS02-05: The "11 February 2002 Cumulative Patch for Internet Explorer" update eliminates all known security vulnerabilities affecting Internet Explorer 6, as well as six new vulnerabilities, and is discussed in Microsoft Security Bulletin MS02-005. Download now to protect your computer from these vulnerabilities, the most serious of which could allow an attacker to run code on your computer. This update applies to: Internet Explorer 6. Internet Explorer 5.5 SP2. Internet Explorer 5.5 SP1. Internet Explorer 5.01 SP2 on Windows 2000 only. Read more...

Impact of vulnerability: Six vulnerabilities, the most serious of which could allow an attacker to run code on another user?s system. This is a cumulative patch that, when installed, eliminates all previously discussed security vulnerabilities affecting IE 5.01, 5.5 and IE 6. In addition, it eliminates the following six newly discovered vulnerabilities: A buffer overrun vulnerability associated with an HTML directive that?s used to incorporate a document within a web page. By creating a web page that invokes the directive using specially selected attributes, an attacker could cause code to run on the user?s system. A vulnerability associated with the GetObject scripting function. Before providing a handle to an operating system object, GetObject performs a series of security checks to ensure that the caller has sufficient privileges to it. However, by requesting a handle to a file using a specially malformed representation, it would be possible to bypass some of these checks, thereby allowing a web page to complete an operation that should be prevented, namely, reading files on the computer of a visiting user?s system. A vulnerability related to the display of file names in the File Download dialogue box. When a file download from a web site is initiated, a dialogue provides the name of the file and lets the user choose what action to take. However, a flaw exists in the way HTML header fields (specifically, the Content-Disposition and Content-Type fields) are handled. This flaw could make it possible for an attacker to misrepresent the name of the file in the dialogue, in an attempt to trick a user into opening or saving an unsafe file. A vulnerability that could allow a web page to open a file on the web site, using any application installed on a user?s system. By design, IE should only open a file on a web site using the application that?s registered to that type of file, and even then only if it?s on a list of safe applications. However, through a flaw in the handling of the Content-Type HTML header field, an attacker could circumvent this restriction, and specify the application that should be invoked to process a particular file. IE would comply, even if the application was listed as unsafe. A vulnerability that could enable a web page to run a script even if the user has disabled scripting. IE checks for the presence of scripts when initially rendering a page. However, the capability exists for objects on a page to respond to asynchronous events; by misusing this capability in a particular way, it could be possible for a web page to fire a script after the page has passed the initial security checks. A newly discovered variant of the "Frame Domain Verification" vulnerability discussed in Microsoft Security Bulletin MS01-058. The vulnerability could enable a malicious web site operator to open two browser windows, one in the web site?s domain and the other on the user?s local file system, and to use the Document.open function to pass information from the latter to the former. This could enable the web site operator to read, but not change, any file on the user?s local computer that could be opened in a browser window. In addition, this could be used to mis-represent the URL in the address bar in a window opened from their site. Maximum Severity Rating: Critical Download available from this Microsoft page. Multilanuage fixes are available!