Wednesday, January 30, 2008

New Microsoft Word attacks pose as news about Tibet

New attacks using rigged Microsoft Word documents have been launched, a security company said Tuesday as it warned users to be leery of mail touting news about Tibet.
Phony e-mails purporting to contain news about Tibet and its government in exile are making the rounds, according to Trend Micro Inc., which explained that the messages carry attachments that are malformed Word documents designed to exploit a vulnerability in parsing the popular word processing system's file format.

When opened, the malicious documents deposit a Trojan horse on the victim's Windows PC, said Trend Micro in a post to its security blog.

Trend Micro said the names on the fake Word documents include the following:

-- CHINA';S [sic] OLYMPIC TORCH OUT OF TIBET 1.doc
-- 2007-07 DRAFT Tibetan MP London schedule.doc
-- DIRECTORY OF TIBET SUPPORT GROUPS IN INDIA.doc
-- Disapppeared [sic] in Tibet.doc

Another security firm, Symantec Corp., confirmed the new attacks but said that it has received only "a small number" of submissions from customers regarding the exploit.

"This social engineering technique has been seen before," said Trend Micro researcher Jake Soriano on the TrendLabs Malware blog. "In October, a Trojan rode on the newsworthiness of the monk-led protests in Myanmar ... arriving as an attachment to spam [that] purported to be a message of support from the Dalai Lama to the monks."

Symantec repeated the long-standing advice that users consider banning Office documents that originate from unknown senders and exercise caution in dealing with unsolicited e-mails, particularly those with attachments.

Microsoft Corp. has patched Word several times in the past two years -- most recently in May 2007, when it holes in the way the application handles documents. The company has also been promoting its newest suites, Office 2007 for Windows and Office 2008 for Mac, as being more secure on the file format front than their predecessors, and it has locked down Office 2003 by limiting the number of formats users can open.

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