Chrome bug no security threat, argues Google

From InfoWorld: Google's Chrome contains a critical vulnerability that under certain circumstances allows attackers to plant malware on a Windows PC, a security company said last week.

According to Slovenia-based Acros Security, Google would not categorize the bug as a vulnerability, and instead called it a "strange behavior that [they] should consider changing."

The vulnerability, said Mitja Kolsek, Acros' CEO, is one of a string in Windows programs that relies on an attack strategy variously dubbed "DLL load hijacking," "binary planting" and "file planting."

The attack jumped into public view in August 2010 when HD Moore, the creator of the Metasploit penetration hacking toolkit and chief security officer at Rapid7, found dozens of vulnerable Windows applications. Moore's report was followed by others, including several from Kolsek and Acros.

Many Windows applications don't call DLLs, or dynamic link libraries, using a full path name, but instead use only the filename, giving hackers a way to trick an application into loading a malicious file with the same title as a required DLL. If attackers can dupe users into visiting malicious Web sites or remote shared folders, or get them to plug in a USB drive -- and in some cases con them into opening a file -- they can hijack a PC and plant malware on it.

Microsoft, for instance, has provided 17 security updates in the last 13 months to fix DLL load hijacking problems, most recently earlier this month.

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