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Critical vulnerabilities completely compromise ‘Symantec Endpoint Protection’
The award-winning [1] and longtime leader of Gartner report league tables [2]; ‘Symantec Endpoint Protection’, developed by the US-based Symantec Corp. (Nasdaq: SYMC), was shipped without removing several critical security vulnerabilities [3]. The vulnerabilities were discovered in a routine ‘99er’ security crash test by experts of the SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab (www.sec-consult.com). In a 99er security crash test, SEC Consult white-hat experts evaluate the product security for the maximum of 99 working hours to determine if this specific release of a product can be compromised by attackers.
The unremoved vulnerabilities enable state-sponsored or criminal hackers to take full control of the ‘Symantec Endpoint Protection Manager’ server. With the full control of the server the attackers could obliterate the endpoint protection provided by the Symantec solution as they would have full access to the protection features of the endpoints. SEC Consult experts recommend immediately installing the update released by the vendor to counter these vulnerabilities [4].
Since mid-2012 SEC Consult has identified several critical vulnerabilities in other Symantec products during routine security tests. A Support Backdoor was identified in Symantec Messaging Gateway [5] and for the Symantec Web Gateway [6]. The vulnerabilities found enabled attackers to run commands with the privileges of the ‘root’ operating system user and to perform surveillance activities.
SEC Consult strongly advises that customers of Symantec products should demand from the vendor exhaustive security tests by (European) security experts before the implementation of the respective software product.
SEC Consult generally recommends routine security crash tests for standard software products to prevent the procurement of ‘toxic’ (i.e. heavily insecure) software. Toxic Software contains severe security vulnerabilities and poses a severe and highly probable risk to the confidentiality, availability and integrity of its owner.
Further technical information can be found in the SEC Consult Security Advisory [3].
For further information please contact:
Johannes Greil
Head of SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab
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