Two Visio Document Parsing Vulnerabilities

Severity: Medium

10 August, 2011

Summary:

  • This vulnerability affects: All current versions of Microsoft Visio
  • How an attacker exploits it: By enticing one of your users into opening a maliciously crafted Visio document
  • Impact: An attacker can execute code, potentially gaining complete control of your users’ computers
  • What to do: Deploy the appropriate Visio patches as soon as possible, or let Windows Update do it for you

Exposure:

Microsoft Visio is a very popular diagramming application, which many administrators use to create network diagrams. It also ships with some Office packages.

In a security bulletin released yesterday, Microsoft describes two security vulnerabilities that affect all current versions of Visio. The vulnerabilities differ technically, but share the same scope and impact. They both involve flaws in how Visio parses Visio documents. If an attacker can entice one of your users into opening a specially crafted Visio file (such as .vsd, .vdx, .vst, or .vtx), he could exploit either of these flaws to execute code on that user’s computer with that user’s  privileges. If your user has administrative privileges, the attacker could gain complete control of their computer.

Solution Path:

Microsoft has released Visio patches to fix this flaw. You should download, test, and deploy the appropriate patches as soon as possible, or let Windows Update do it for you.

For All WatchGuard Users:

If the practice fits your business environment, you can use the HTTP, SMTP, and/or POP3 proxies to block Visio documents by extension (such as .vsd, .vdx, .vst, or .vtx). However, doing so blocks both malicious and legitimate file.

If you would like to use our proxies to block Visio documents, follow the links below for instructions:

Status:

Microsoft has released a fix.

References:

This alert was researched and written by Corey Nachreiner, CISSP.


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More alerts and articles: Log into the LiveSecurity Archive.

About Corey Nachreiner

Corey Nachreiner has been with WatchGuard since 1999 and has since written more than a thousand concise security alerts and easily-understood educational articles for WatchGuard users. His security training videos have generated hundreds of letters of praise from thankful customers and accumulated more than 100,000 views on YouTube and Google Video. A Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP), Corey speaks internationally and is often quoted by other online sources, including C|NET, eWeek, and Slashdot. Corey enjoys "modding" any technical gizmo he can get his hands on, and considers himself a hacker in the old sense of the word.

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