Information Security Office
Security Alert: Windows - Patch
Released for Critical "WMF" Vulnerability
5 Jan 2006
Summary
On Jan 5, 2006, Microsoft did an
early release of a critical security update, in response to publicly
circulating exploits of the Windows "WMF" vulnerability.
All current versions of Windows are
affected by the vulnerability patched in this update.
This vulnerability can result in system-level compromise, possibly
without direct user interaction.
What to Do
Windows users can manually use
"Windows Update" to download and install the current operating system
patches.
Additionally, it is recommended that
all Windows machines have an automated patch management solution
installed and configured on their system. Stanford provides BigFix to
automatically patch Windows machines; it is available at http://patching.stanford.edu.
Alternatively, Windows Automatic Update should be enabled.
Please
remember to reboot your machine after patching manually, or when
prompted to do so by Windows Update or by your BigFix administrator.
Most patches do not take effect until after a reboot.
Undo the Workaround
If you have applied the manual
workaround described in the previous
security alert and unregistered shimgvw.dll, you should
re-register it after your
machine has been fully updated and rebooted. The procedure
requires that you be logged in with administrative privileges.
- Click Start,
click Run, type:
regsvr32
%windir%\system32\shimgvw.dll
and then click OK.
- A dialog box appears to confirm that the
registration process has succeeded. Click OK to close the dialog box.
Technical
Detail
Information regarding this security update is available at http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms06-001.mspx.
MS06-001 - Vulnerability
in Graphics Rendering Engine Could Allow Remote Code Execution
(KB912919)
- Affected platforms:
- Windows 98, 98SE, ME
- Windows 2000, all versions
- Windows XP, all versions
- Windows Server 2003, all versions
- May be activated by a malicious web page,
email, attachment, instant message, or any other channel for
transferring a file.
- Exploits are
currently circulating on the Internet.
The Information Security Office would like to
thank the Windows Systems Team in ITS for their assistance in producing
this alert.
Last
modified Wednesday, 08-Feb-2006 11:46:34 PST
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