Unless its two biggest rivals take extraordinary steps, Mozilla will be the first browser maker to patch a critical vulnerability
used a week ago to win $5,000 in a hacking contest.
Browsers get hacked before phones at security show
At the PWN2OWN competition last Thursday, a computer science student from Germany who would only give his first name as Nils
cracked a Sony laptop running Windows 7 by exploiting a previously unknown bug in Microsoft Corp.'s new Internet Explorer 8 (IE8). Nils quickly followed that hack
with two more, of Apple Inc.'s Safari and Mozilla's Firefox, both running on a MacBook.
For each successful exploit, Nils was paid $5,000 -- a total of $15,000 -- by contest sponsor 3Com Corp.'s TippingPoint. He
also was awarded the Sony Viao notebook for being the first researcher to hack the machine.
By the rules of PWN2OWN, researchers are not allowed to divulge details of their vulnerabilities and exploits, but instead
sign over the rights to both to TippingPoint, which in turn reports the bugs to the appropriate vendor.
Earlier today, Mozilla's director of security engineering, Lucas Adamski, told IDG News reporter Robert McMillan that Firefox would be patched against a critical vulnerability that had been disclosed on the milw0rm.com site yesterday.
Later in the day, Mozilla added that it would also fix the bug Nils revealed. "Both issues have been investigated and fixes
have been developed which are now undergoing quality assurance testing," the company announced in a post to its security blog this afternoon. "These fixes will be included in the upcoming Firefox 3.0.8 release, due to be released by April 1."
Mozilla has labeled the 3.0.8 update as a "high-priority fire drill security update;" in other words, an emergency patch.
Before declaring the fire drill update, Mozilla had slated 3.0.8 for a mid-April release.
It's unlikely that either Microsoft or Apple will patch their browsers' bugs before Mozilla. Apple, for example, never generates
Safari patches within such a short time span. For that matter, neither does Microsoft.
The IE flaw, however, may already be fixed -- at least in IE8. The PWN2OWN contest featured the release candidate of IE8,
which is the version Nils hacked. Several hours before the contest kicked off, Microsoft released the final edition of IE8, which some have speculated included a fix for Nils' bug.
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