Security News > 2003 > March > Microsoft warns of firewall vulnerability

Microsoft warns of firewall vulnerability
2003-03-22 08:53

http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/story/0,10801,79537,00.html By Paul Roberts IDG News Service MARCH 20, 2003 Microsoft Corp. warned customers of another security vulnerability yesterday, this one affecting its Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server 2000 firewall and Web cache product. A software flaw was found in the ISA Server's Domain Name Service (DNS) intrusion-detection application filter that could allow an attacker to launch a denial-of-service attack against the ISA Server that prevents that device from processing DNS requests. The ISA Server allows DNS requests to be passed from the Internet to an internal DNS server, a process known as DNS publishing. Application filters are used to analyze incoming data streams, including DNS requests. The filters enable the ISA Server to block, redirect or modify data as it passes through the firewall. For example, the filters could guard against attacks embedded in URLs, Microsoft said. Because of the flaw, a specially formed DNS request, encountered under what Microsoft termed "a specific circumstance," causes the DNS server publishing feature to stop responding. DNS requests received by the ISA Server after the denial-of-service attack would be stopped at the firewall, Microsoft said. Although other ISA Server functions would be unaffected by the failure of the DNS publishing component, administrators would need to restart the ISA server to recover from the denial-of-service attack, the company said. Microsoft rated the ISA Server vulnerability "moderate," saying that it could be used only in a denial-of-service attack and didn’t offer attackers the ability to disable the firewall or gain administrative control of the ISA Server. Microsoft provided a patch for the ISA Server vulnerability, MS03-009. The warning was the second such notice released yesterday and the third this week from the company. The other two alerts this week, both rated “critical,” concerned buffer overflow vulnerabilities in a Windows 2000 component that supports the World Wide Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) protocol, and the Windows Script Engine, which is found in all of the company's supported Windows operating systems - ISN is currently hosted by Attrition.org To unsubscribe email majordomo () attrition org with 'unsubscribe isn' in the BODY of the mail.


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http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/story/0,10801,79537,00.html

Related vendor

VENDOR LAST 12M #/PRODUCTS LOW MEDIUM HIGH CRITICAL TOTAL VULNS
Microsoft 665 798 4412 4095 3689 12994