Mozilla on Wednesday patched 10 security vulnerabilities in Firefox 3.5, all but one ranked critical, as it delivered the
first update that automatically checks for outdated versions of the popular Flash Player plug-in.
In four separate sets of patches, Firefox 3.5.3 fixed a total of 10 flaws, the majority of them stability issues in the application's
browser and JavaScript rendering engines, some of which Mozilla said might be exploitable by hackers.
Four of the seven vulnerabilites outlined in the MFSA 2009-47 advisory produce browser engine crashes, while the other three crash Firefox's new TraceMonkey JavaScript engine. "Some of
these crashes showed evidence of memory corruption under certain circumstances and we presume that with enough effort at least
some of these could be exploited to run arbitrary code," the advisory acknowledged, using boilerplate language Mozilla often
uses to describe critical bugs.
Mozilla recommended that users disable JavaScript in Firefox if they were unable or unwilling to patch the browser.
Three other advisories spelled out critical vulnerabilites in Firefox's RSS function and in Mozilla's XML-based language,
XUL (XML User Interface Language), which is used to create Web applications able to operate offline; and a URL-spoofing bug
the company ranked as "low," the least dangerous of the firm's four-step scoring system.
Only two of the 10 vulnerabilities were uncovered by outside researchers; Mozilla's own developers or security engineers rooted
out the rest. One of the two reported by outsiders came from 3Com TippingPoint's Zero Day Initiative, a bounty program that
pays people for turning in bugs.
Mozilla also patched the 2008 edition of Firefox on Wednesday, updating that version to 3.0.14 as it fixed 11 flaws, only
one of which was unique to the older edition.
That vulnerability, said Mozilla in the accompanying advisory , could be used by attackers to trick a user into installing a malicious security module in the browser. Mozilla ranked the
bug as a "moderate" threat.
According to Mozilla, Dan Kaminsky of IOActive, a researcher best known as the discoverer of the DNS (Domain Name Server) vulnerability in July 2008, reported that Firefox 3.0 remains vulnerable to possible remote attacks using malicious security modules. Kaminsky's research was also involved in a pair of patches that Mozilla rolled out last month for Firefox.
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