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Apple Inc. has released yesterday
the QuickTime 7.3 update, which fixes quite an important number of serious
security flows in the media player’s software. Six of the seven bugs that this
patch fixes could have allowed a hacker to run unauthorized software on the
users’ personal computers. The users could have been tricked to view a
maliciously crafted movie or image file and this way the hackers could have
gained access to their computers.
The seventh bug that this update
fixes has lied in the media player for Java. Apple Inc. has made public the
fact that through this flaw the attackers could have gained access to sensitive
information and could have even run Java applets with elevated privileges.
The QuickTime security update
that has been released yesterday has been developed for the latest versions of
Apple’s Mac OS X operating system, as well as for Microsoft’s Windows XP and
Windows Vista operating systems.
According to nCircle Network
Security’s director of security operations, Andrew Storms, none of these seven
bugs had been previously disclosed to the public.
However, this is the fifth
security update that Apple Inc. has released for its QuickTime media player
this year. The company has credited security researchers from companies such as
Adobe, 3Com or Verisign, who have reported the bugs Apple has fixed through
this latest patch.
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