Apple Fixes 40 Security Bugs In Mac OS X

This week Apple spent most of their time fixing the security breaches and vulnerabilities that were found in many of the components and application that were bundled with the Mac OS X. Yesterday they were able to patch 40 of these security problems which were found in 25 of the applications. These applications included iCal, Flash Player, and Apache.

This is the year’s third update and it was only able to fix less than half of the flaws that were found. Apple tagged 16 of the 40 patches in Wednesday’s update with its “arbitrary code execution” phrasing, putting them into the category most other vendors would label “critical.”

According to the Security Update 2008-003 advisory, the most-patched components by vulnerability count were Apple’s version of the Apache open-source Web server (eight bugs fixed) and the version of Adobe’s Flash Player that Apple tucks into Mac OS X (seven flaws patched).

Fixes to Flash Player, said Apple in its Security Update 2008-003 advisory, update the popular multimedia player application to Version 9.0.124.0, the one currently available for download from Adobe itself. Adobe released that version nearly two months ago to patch the same seven vulnerabilities Apple fixed yesterday. Among the seven was one used to claim a $5,000 prize at a hacker challenge in late March.

Also notable in the update was a fix for one of three iCal vulnerabilities that had been disclosed last week by Core Security Technologies. Apple patched the most serious of the trio, marked as CVE-2008-1035, Core’s chief technology officer, Ivan Arce, confirmed today. “Yes, I can say that they patched the most serious of the vulnerabilities, but I cannot confirm that they have patched, or haven’t patched, the other two.”

Core reported the three iCal bugs to Apple in January 2008, and then went public with information about the vulnerabilities last week after it tired of Apple’s patch delays. Core’s researchers and Apple’s security team also disagreed over the severity of the two bugs still unpatched, according to notes Core posted online.
Arce confirmed the disagreements last week in an interview, and mentioned them again today. After several rounds of e-mail messages, he said, Core told Apple that it appeared the two lesser vulnerabilities were “crash-only,” and could not be used to inject malicious code. “But that doesn’t mean that they’re not security bugs,” Arce argued last week.

“If you look at our timeline, you’ll see that there was some disagreement about whether the two bugs were security bugs,” Arce said today. According to that timeline, Apple said it wanted to classify the two vulnerabilities as having “no security-related consequences.” Core disagreed. Arce said Core will be running tests through Friday to see whether Apple added behind-the-scenes patches for the second and third bugs — possible because Apple may have decided on its own that they are more design flaws, and less security vulnerabilities.

Other patches included in the Wednesday update address vulnerabilities in AppKit, CoreFoundation, the Help Viewer, Image Capture, the Mac kernel, Mail and Single Sign-on. The risks to users run the gamut from the critical “arbitrary code execution” and password exposure to cross-site scripting and denial-of-service attacks. The majority of the 40 patches apply to both Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) and Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard); separate updates are available for Intel- and PowerPC-based machines, as well as for Mac OS X Server.

Security Update 2008-002 can be downloaded manually from the Apple site, or installed using Mac OS X’s integrated update service, though Leopard users won’t see the update on the latter, since the security patches have been rolled into the Mac OS X 10.5.3 upgrade released earlier Wednesday.

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