16 April 21, 06:30
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A zero-day vulnerability in Microsoft Windows may already have been exploited.
Kaspersky researchers have found a zero-day vulnerability (CVE-2021-28310) in a Microsoft Windows component called Desktop Window Manager (DWM). We believe several threat actors have already exploited the vulnerability. Microsoft just released the patch, and we suggest applying it immediately. Here’s why.
What is Desktop Window Manager?
Pretty much everyone is familiar with the windowed interface of modern operating systems: each program opening in a separate window that doesn’t necessarily take up the whole screen. Windows may overlap, for example, one casting a shadow over others as if it were physically blocking the light. In Microsoft Windows, the component responsible for rendering features such as shadows and transparency is Desktop Window Manager.
To understand why Desktop Window Manager is important in a cybersecurity context, consider that programs don’t just draw their windows on the screen; they put the necessary information in a buffer. Desktop Window Manager grabs that information from each program’s buffer and creates the overall composite view that the user sees. When a user moves one window over another, the open programs don’t know anything about whether their windows should be casting a shadow or having a shadow cast on them, for example. Desktop Window Manager does that job, and as such it is a key service in Windows that has existed in every version of Windows since Vista — and cannot be deactivated in Windows 8 or later versions.
Desktop Window Manager’s vulnerability
The vulnerability our advanced exploit prevention technology discovered is an elevation of privilege vulnerability. That means a program can trick Desktop Window Manager into giving it access that it shouldn’t have. In this case, the vulnerability allowed the attackers to execute arbitrary code on victims’ machines — it essentially gave them full control over the computers.
How to avoid CVE-2021-28310 exploitation
It’s critical to act quickly. Here’s what you can do:...
- Install the patches Microsoft released on April 13, immediately and on all vulnerable computers;
- Protect all of your devices with a robust security solution such as Kaspersky Endpoint Security for Business, whose advanced exploit prevention component blocks attempts to exploit CVE-2021-28310.