Posted at 06:36 PM ET, 01/ 1/2006
Unofficial Patch for Windows Flaw
Security experts are urging Windows users to apply a non-Microsoft-issued software patch to fix an extremely dangerous bug that has exposed hundreds of millions of the operating system's users to spyware and viruses.
The patch was developed by computer programmer Ilfak Guilfanov, perhaps best known in security circles at the creator of IDA Pro, a tool used to design and deconstruct software and even malware.
Tom Liston, an Internet security consultant with Washington-based Intelguardians and an incident handler with the SANS Internet Storm Center, pleaded with Microsoft users to feel at ease installing the patch, which he said SANS had reverse-engineered, reviewed and vetted to ensure it fixes the problem and does nothing else.
"To the best of my knowledge, over the past 5 years, this rag-tag group of volunteers hasn't asked for your trust: we've earned it," Liston wrote. "Now we're going to expend some of that hard-earned trust. This is a bad situation that will only get worse. The very best response that our collective wisdom can create is contained in this advice -- unregister shimgvw.dll and use the unofficial patch. You need to trust us.
http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/
http://www.grc.com/sn/notes-020.htm
Unofficial Patch for Windows Flaw
Security experts are urging Windows users to apply a non-Microsoft-issued software patch to fix an extremely dangerous bug that has exposed hundreds of millions of the operating system's users to spyware and viruses.
The patch was developed by computer programmer Ilfak Guilfanov, perhaps best known in security circles at the creator of IDA Pro, a tool used to design and deconstruct software and even malware.
Tom Liston, an Internet security consultant with Washington-based Intelguardians and an incident handler with the SANS Internet Storm Center, pleaded with Microsoft users to feel at ease installing the patch, which he said SANS had reverse-engineered, reviewed and vetted to ensure it fixes the problem and does nothing else.
"To the best of my knowledge, over the past 5 years, this rag-tag group of volunteers hasn't asked for your trust: we've earned it," Liston wrote. "Now we're going to expend some of that hard-earned trust. This is a bad situation that will only get worse. The very best response that our collective wisdom can create is contained in this advice -- unregister shimgvw.dll and use the unofficial patch. You need to trust us.
http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/
http://www.grc.com/sn/notes-020.htm
