Hi Ishe & fellow listers;

Below is the article that the link Ishe has posted about Adobe refers to.

Adobe acknowledges critical security flaw in software

Page last updated at 15:35 GMT, Monday, 7 June 2010 16:35 UK

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Adobe sign
 Adobe has been criticised by Apple boss Steve Jobs over software security

Adobe has acknowledged a "critical" security flaw in its Reader, Acrobat and 
Flash Player software.

Adobe says the vulnerability potentially enables hackers to take control of 
affected computer systems.

Users running Windows, Macintosh or Linux might all be open to attack.

The company is working to fix the problem. In the meantime, users of Reader, 
Acrobat and Flash are advised to ensure their anti-virus software is up to
date.

"It doesn't really get any worse than a 'zero-day' vulnerability like this," 
said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, a security 
software
company.

Affected software
Continue reading the main story
Adobe Flash Player 10.0.45.2 and earlier 10.0.x versions for Win, Mac, Linux 
and Solaris
Adobe Flash Player 9.0.262 and earlier 9.0.x versions for Win, Mac, Linux 
and Solaris
Adobe Reader and Acrobat 9.3.2 and earlier 9.x versions for Win, Mac and 
UNIX
Adobe Flash Player 10.1 Release Candidate does not appear to be vulnerable
Adobe Reader and Acrobat 8.x are confirmed not vulnerable

Source: Adobe

He said that hackers could create a "booby-trapped Flash animation, or PDF" 
that would give them access to a person's computer, potentially allowing 
them
to harvest personal information or use the machine to send spam messages.

In recent years, PDFs have become a popular means of sharing documents that 
are not easily altered by the recipient.

Vulnerability exploited

In a security advisory, Adobe said: "There are reports that this 
vulnerability is being actively exploited in the wild against both Adobe 
Flash Player,
and Adobe Reader and Acrobat".

Whilst it works to fix the problem, the company suggested upgrading to the 
latest "release candidate" for the Adobe Flash Player, version 10.1, which 
it
said "does not appear to be vulnerable".

Alternatively, the company said that Adobe Reader and Acrobat users could 
delete or rename the "authplay.dll" file on their system.

However, Adobe said that doing so meant that "users will experience a 
non-exploitable crash or error message when opening a PDF file that contains 
SWF [Adobe
Flash] content."

Mr Cluley said that keeping anti-virus software up to date would also help 
to avoid problems.

"There has been a long history of vulnerabilities being found in Adobe's 
products," he said.

"This is probably because they are everywhere and omnipresent."

Adobe estimates that more than 95% of computers worldwide have Flash Player 
installed.

Argument strengthened

Apple has been criticised for preventing its popular iPhone and iPad devices 
from viewing Adobe Flash animations and videos.

Apple boss Stve Jobs recently wrote an open letter explaining that Adobe's 
Flash was, amongst other things, "the number one reason Macs crash".

Mr Cluley said: "The more people who are concerned about Adobe's products 
and the ability for them to be written securely, the more it backs up Steve 
Jobs's
argument that Adobe's software is buggy.

"The crux of the problem is that Adobe have overloaded some of their 
programs with so many bells and whistles, that with lots of code, there is a 
much higher
chance that there will be a bug.

"This vulnerability exploits a feature of a PDF file format that will not be 
widely used.

"A simpler code might have led to a simpler life."


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