Adobe delivers an out-of-date version of Reader to users who download the popular application from its Web site, a security
company warned today.
The edition Adobe currently offers includes at least 14 security vulnerabilities that have been patched by the company in
the last two months.
Danish vulnerability tracking vendor Secunia first noticed that Adobe was offering an outdated Reader when users of its Personal
Software Inspector (PSI) utility -- which scans Windows PCs for unpatched applications -- started complaining when the tool
said they were running a vulnerable version, even though they had just downloaded the PDF viewer.
"There was some confusion about Adobe Reader," said Mikkel Winther, the manager of the PSI partner program. "Users had downloaded
the latest Reader, but still PSI was telling them that it was vulnerable."
At first, Secunia suspected that PSI was throwing off a "false positive," but that wasn't the case. "Adobe.com ships software
with known vulnerabilities," Winther said.
The version now hosted on Adobe's Web site, said Winther, is Reader 9.1, an edition that was released March 10 to plug several holes, including one that had been actively exploited by hackers since at least Jan. 9, 2009.
Adobe has issued two security updates since then. The first, released May 12, patched another "zero-day" bug in Reader, while the second, issued June 9, fixed at least 13 critical flaws reported by outside researchers and secretly patched an unspecified number of bugs found by Adobe's own security team.
Computerworld confirmed that Adobe's Web site offers Reader 9.1 to users who download the application. Adobe did not reply
to a request for comment on why it posts an out-of-date edition on its site.
"Adobe does have the Adobe Updater, which will eventually update Reader to the patched versions," said Winther, "but sometimes
it takes days or weeks for the updater to come up." By default Adobe's updater pings the company server once a week.
Adobe's practice leaves users vulnerable to hackers who rely on malformed PDF documents to hijack PCs, said Winther. If a
user receives a PDF -- likely as an attachment to an e-mail message -- but doesn't have Reader installed, then downloads and
installs Reader 9.1 from the company's site, he can be successfully attacked by exploits fixed in Version 9.1.1 and 9.1.2.
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright Computerworld, Inc.