Microsoft
Corp is rushing to fix a bug in its widely used Internet Explorer web
browser after a computer security firm disclosed the flaw over the
weekend, saying hackers have already exploited it in attacks on some US
companies.
PCs running Windows XP will not
receive any updates fixing that bug when they are released, however,
because Microsoft stopped supporting the 13-year-old operating system
earlier this month. Security firms estimate that between 15 and 25 per
cent of the world's PCs still run Windows XP
Microsoft
disclosed on Saturday its plans to fix the bug in an advisory to its
customers posted on its security website, which it said is present in
Internet Explorer versions 6 to 11. Those versions dominate desktop
browsing, accounting for 55 per cent of the PC browser market, according
to tech research firm NetMarketShare.
Cybersecurity
software maker FireEye Inc said that a sophisticated group of hackers
have been exploiting the bug in a campaign dubbed " Operation
Clandestine Fox."
FireEye, whose Mandiant
division helps companies respond to cyber attacks, declined to name
specific victims or identify the group of hackers, saying that an
investigation into the matter is still active.
"It's
a campaign of targeted attacks seemingly against US-based firms,
currently tied to defense and financial sectors," FireEye spokesman
Vitor De Souza said via email. "It's unclear what the motives of this
attack group are, at this point. It appears to be broad-spectrum intel
gathering."
He declined to elaborate, though he said one way to protect against them would be to switch to another browser.
Microsoft
said in the advisory that the vulnerability could allow a hacker to
take complete control of an affected system, then do things such as
viewing changing, or deleting data, installing malicious programs, or
creating accounts that would give hackers full user rights.
FireEye
and Microsoft have not provided much information about the security
flaw or the approach that hackers could use to figure out how to exploit
it, said Aviv Raff, chief technology officer of cybersecurity firm
Seculert.
Yet other groups of hackers are now
racing to learn more about it so they can launch similar attacks before
Microsoft prepares a security update, Raff said.
"Microsoft should move fast," he said. "This will snowball."
Still,
he cautioned that Windows XP users will not benefit from that update
since Microsoft has just halted support for that product.
The
software maker said in a statement to Reuters that it advises Windows
XP users to upgrade to one of two most recently versions of its
operating system, Windows 7 or 8.
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