Local researchers find Windows security flaw

Researchers at a software company in Malta say they have discovered a decade-old Windows vulnerability that can cause a system to instantly crash and display the so-called blue screen of death. This was reported on SCMagazine US.com and...

Researchers at a software company in Malta say they have discovered a decade-old Windows vulnerability that can cause a system to instantly crash and display the so-called blue screen of death.

This was reported on SCMagazine US.com and SCMagazineUK.com.

The denial-of-service condition can result if a user is tricked into running an application that contains the malicious code, Paul Gafa, CTO of 2X Software, told SCMagazineUS.com.

"You can be the least privileged user on the system and still crash it," he said. "I believe it is very easy for Microsoft to sort it out. They just need to validate arguments passed to Windows APIs (application programming interfaces)."

The vulnerability, which Mr Gafa and his team discovered while writing a software testing application, is present in all versions of the Microsoft operating system dating back to Windows 2000, Mr Gafa added.

It recommended not running any applications from unknown sources, avoiding websites of unreliable content, configuring your web browser to the safest settings and arming yourself with an updated virus scanner.

A Microsoft representative said the company was aware of the bug but downplayed the risk.

"Our initial assessment of the report is that malicious code would have to already be running or a user would have to be able to run a specially crafted application to cause the system to crash," a company spokesperson told SCMagazineUS.com in an e-mail. "In either case, the system has already been compromised or the user has rights to logon to the system."

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