From ciac@rumpole.llnl.gov Fri Mar 10 14:23:31 2000 From: CIAC Mail User Resent-From: mea culpa To: ciac-bulletin@rumpole.llnl.gov Resent-To: jericho@attrition.org Date: Wed, 1 Mar 2000 13:27:31 -0800 (PST) Subject: CIAC Bulletin K-024: Microsoft Systems Management Server Vulnerability [ For Public Release ] -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- __________________________________________________________ The U.S. Department of Energy Computer Incident Advisory Capability ___ __ __ _ ___ / | /_\ / \___ __|__ / \ \___ __________________________________________________________ INFORMATION BULLETIN Microsoft Systems Management Server Vulnerability February 24, 2000 21:00 GMT Number K-024 ______________________________________________________________________________ PROBLEM: Microsoft has identified a vulnerability in System Management Server (SMS). PLATFORM: Intel & Alpha platforms running SMS 2.0 DAMAGE: A malicious user may gain elevated privileges on the local machine. SOLUTION: Patch system per Microsoft Advisory below. ______________________________________________________________________________ VULNERABILITY Risk is low. It is recommended that any SMS server allowing a ASSESSMENT: user to establish interactive sessions follow procedures to eliminate this vulnerability. ______________________________________________________________________________ http://ciac.llnl.gov/ciac/bulletins/k-024.shtml _______________________________________________________________________________ CIAC wishes to acknowledge the contributions of Microsoft for the information contained in this bulletin. _______________________________________________________________________________ CIAC, the Computer Incident Advisory Capability, is the computer security incident response team for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the emergency backup response team for the National Institutes of Health (NIH). CIAC is located at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California. CIAC is also a founding member of FIRST, the Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams, a global organization established to foster cooperation and coordination among computer security teams worldwide. CIAC services are available to DOE, DOE contractors, and the NIH. CIAC can be contacted at: Voice: +1 925-422-8193 FAX: +1 925-423-8002 STU-III: +1 925-423-2604 E-mail: ciac@llnl.gov For emergencies and off-hour assistance, DOE, DOE contractor sites, and the NIH may contact CIAC 24-hours a day. During off hours (5PM - 8AM PST), use one of the following methods to contact CIAC: 1. Call the CIAC voice number 925-422-8193 and leave a message, or 2. Call 888-449-8369 to send a Sky Page to the CIAC duty person or 3. Send e-mail to 4498369@skytel.com, or 4. Call 800-201-9288 for the CIAC Project Leader. Previous CIAC notices, anti-virus software, and other information are available from the CIAC Computer Security Archive. World Wide Web: http://www.ciac.org/ (or http://ciac.llnl.gov -- they're the same machine) Anonymous FTP: ftp.ciac.org (or ciac.llnl.gov -- they're the same machine) Modem access: +1 (925) 423-4753 (28.8K baud) +1 (925) 423-3331 (28.8K baud) CIAC has several self-subscribing mailing lists for electronic publications: 1. CIAC-BULLETIN for Advisories, highest priority - time critical information and Bulletins, important computer security information; 2. SPI-ANNOUNCE for official news about Security Profile Inspector (SPI) software updates, new features, distribution and availability; 3. SPI-NOTES, for discussion of problems and solutions regarding the use of SPI products. Our mailing lists are managed by a public domain software package called Majordomo, which ignores E-mail header subject lines. 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Your agency's team will coordinate with CIAC. The Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams (FIRST) is a world-wide organization. A list of FIRST member organizations and their constituencies can be obtained via WWW at http://www.first.org/. This document was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States Government. Neither the United States Government nor the University of California nor any of their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial products, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation or favoring by the United States Government or the University of California. 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LAST 10 CIAC BULLETINS ISSUED (Previous bulletins available from CIAC) K-014: HP-UX Aserver Vulnerability K-015: ColdFusion Information Exposure (CFCACHE Tag) K-016: Microsoft "Malformed IMAP Request" Vulnerability K-017: Microsoft "Malformed RTF Control Word" Vulnerability K-018: HP-UX - Security Vulnerability with PMTU Strategy K-019: Microsoft - "Spoofed LPC Port Request" Vulnerability K-020: Majordomo open() call Vulnerability K-021: Malicious HTML Tags Vulnerability K-022: FreeBSD - Asmon/Ascpu Vulnerability K-023: FreeBSD - Delegate Proxy Server Vulnerability -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 4.0 Business Edition iQCVAwUBOLbZQbnzJzdsy3QZAQESygQAob9g1sMqhiE4cZA+vfGroISnlb4CoMX3 6o54/1cS2qwTELa7gKUypR/FdPUCtJn65BZA0GIZXgtgcVNOeLTIZzwBbyuaXyDz rpeAX1Anjdd3b93+ZswRRI9OUtLeZgjs6n6iKBqh8IFJ3NAK/VFbvFFY9oKQUt5t Yd90vE8Ziw4= =PYXF -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----