
Cnet is reporting that Apple has plugged a number of security holes in Quicktime.
Read more here or after the jump.
By Joris Evers
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: March 5, 2007, 2:47 PM PST
Apple on Monday released updates to its QuickTime media player software to repair eight serious security vulnerabilities.
The vulnerabilities expose both Macs and Windows PCs to cyberattack, Apple said in a security alert. In all cases, an attacker could craft a malicious file which, when opened with QuickTime, could give the miscreant full control over a computer running the software, Apple said.
The problems lie in the way QuickTime handles a number of formats. The security updates repair problems in the way the software handles QuickTime, MIDI, 3GP, PICT and QTIF files, according to the Apple alert.
Apple regularly issues patches for QuickTime. In January, the Mac maker put out a fix for a zero-day flaw that was released as part of the “Month of the Apple Bugs” project.
Security researchers have increasingly been targeting applications such as QuickTime in recent months. With operating systems becoming more secure, widely used programs such as media players, instant-message tools and antivirus shields have become popular hacker targets, pundits have said.
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