SANS: Attacks shift to Mac, zero-day

01.05.2006
The SANS Institute warned of a steep increase in critical security holes in Apple Computer's Mac OS X operating system and in previously undiscovered ("zero day") vulnerabilities in Web browsers.

A booming cyber crime market is driving the growth in zero-day attacks, which are used against Web browsers and enterprise applications by Oracle, Symantec, and others to access sensitive data, SANS said.

After warning in November that hackers were turning their attention to security holes in applications, SANS again found that application attacks are on the rise, said Rohit Dhamankar, project manager for the SANS Top 20 and a lead security architect at TippingPoint, a division of 3Com.

In the last six months, malicious hackers have shifted from looking for holes in Windows Services, like the Local Security Authority Subsystem Service (LSASS) hole that gave birth to the Sasser worm. That decline was offset by an increase in holes in client side software such as Web browsers, e-mail clients, productivity tools and media players, he said.

"We haven't had vulnerabilities that lead to worms like Zotob or Sasser, but we have seen a large number of vulnerabilities in IE and other programs," Dhamankar said.

More than ever, software from Apple Computer is being targeted, Dhamankar said. "Its part of the shift to application (attacks). You've got zero-day (vulnerabilities) reported in Mac OSX and (Apple's) Safari browser. People can browse Web sites with a Mac and get infected," he said.

Mac OS X machines are still far safer from Internet based attacks than Microsoft Windows, but it's not bullet-proof, contrary to the beliefs of some of Apple's staunch supporters, Dhamankar said.

Often, flaws in file format handling open the door to application hacks, as with the recent Windows Metafile (WMF) and Windows Address Book holes, Dhamankar said.

Media file formats for Apple QuickTime, Windows Media Player, and products from RealNetworks and Macromedia are also popular specimens for online criminals and malicious hackers, SANS said.

The volume of new holes is daunting. More than 100 such vulnerabilities, including cross site scripting and SQL injection flaws, might be discovered in a single week. The time between their discovery and their use in attacks is also diminishing, he said.

Enterprise applications like networked backup services and Oracle Corp. databases continue to be hot targets, Dhamankar said.

"People are going for the data," Dhamankar said.