Software vendors will fix these vulnerabilities, but users should remember that there are always zero-day exploits out there
Following the recent revelations about the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency’s cyber espionage arsenal, software vendors reiterated their commitments to fix vulnerabilities in a timely manner and told users that many of the flaws described in the agency’s leaked documents have been fixed.
While these assurances are understandable from a public relations perspective, they don’t really change anything, especially for companies and users that are the target of state-sponsored hackers. The software they use is not less safe, nor better protected, than it was before WikiLeaks published the 8,700-plus CIA documents last Tuesday.
The leaked files describe malware tools and exploits used by the CIA’s cyber divisions to hack into all major desktop and mobile operating systems, as well as into networking gear and embedded devices like smart TVs. The documents don’t contain the actual code of those tools and some of the supposedly more telling descriptions have been redacted.
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said that his organization will share unpublished details with software vendors so that the vulnerabilities can be patched. But even if WikiLeaks does that, it’s important to realize that the information only represents a snapshot in time.
The most recent date string in the documents is from early March 2016, potentially indicating when the files were copied from the CIA’s systems. Some of the exploit listings suggest the same.
For example, the page describing exploits for Apple’s iOS contains a table that has them arranged by iOS version. That table stops at iOS 9.2, which was released in December 2015. The next significant update, iOS 9.3, was released in late March 2016.
One kernel exploit, codenamed Nandao, which was obtained from the U.K.’s GCHQ, is listed as working for iOS versions 8.0 to 9.2. Does that mean that it doesn’t work on iOS 9.3 or even more recent versions of the operating system? Not necessarily. It’s more likely that the table stops at 9.2 because that was the latest version of iOS when the CIA files were copied.
Moreover, it’s highly unlikely that Apple can tell if this and other exploits have been patched or not without additional details. The only description for “Nandao” is that it’s a heap overflow memory corruption vulnerability, and there’s no indication for which kernel component it’s actually located in.
“Unless Apple obtained full details and/or the exploits as well as performed a thorough root cause analysis, Apple can’t be sure that newer versions aren’t affected,” Carsten Eiram, chief research officer at vulnerability intelligence firm Risk Based Security, said via email.
That’s also the case for flaws affecting other software. Eiram’s company was able to confirm that some have been patched, but some still work in the latest versions of the programs they affect, like a DLL hijacking flaw in the Prezi Desktop presentation software.
“Users shouldn’t just presume newer versions aren’t affected simply because they’re not mentioned in the dumps,” Eiram said.
And even if all these flaws eventually will be disclosed to vendors and patched, it doesn’t mean that the CIA doesn’t have newer zero-day exploits. Its exploit acquisition efforts haven’t stopped in March 2016.
The agency had exploits for unpatched vulnerabilities when its internal documents were leaked and it’s very likely that it has similar exploits for the latest versions of popular programs and operating systems at this moment.
It’s important to realize that there are always zero-day exploits out there, and not just in the hands of intelligence agencies. A similar leak in 2015 from Hacking Team, an Italian company that makes surveillance software for law enforcement, revealed that the firm was regularly buying zero-day exploits from hackers.
Numerous hacker groups have used zero-day exploits in their attacks over the years, some so frequently that they probably have large stockpiles of unpatched flaws. There are also private brokers that pay huge sums of money to acquire such exploits and then resell them to their customers, which includes law enforcement and intelligence agencies.
“This leak is mostly just confirming suspicions about the capabilities of such agencies more than surprising us,” Eiram said.
According to Eiram, the software industry can better prevent developers from introducing vulnerabilities in their code and can build features to make exploitation harder and reduce risks. But there’s no magic wand for getting rid of all vulnerabilities in the foreseeable future. If anything, annual statistics show that the number of software vulnerabilities is actually on the rise.
“For that reason, it is always good for users to keep in mind—without developing full-blown paranoia—that when navigating the digital world there is always someone out there who can compromise your system if they really wanted to,” Eiram said. “A bit of logic, skepticism, and security awareness goes a long way, both in the physical and the digital world.”
Users and companies who are likely to be the target of cyberespionage attacks should take a multilayered approach to defense that goes well beyond applying vendor patches and takes the existence of zero-day exploits into consideration.
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