Security

Adobe confirms Flash zero-day bug in PDF docs

Adobe is investigating a critical vulnerability in its Flash format that is currently being exploited by hackers using malicious PDF documents, according to the company's security team and outside researchers.

Adobe said little in a short entry to its security blog late. “Adobe is aware of reports of a potential vulnerability in Adobe Reader and Acrobat 9.1.2 and Adobe Flash Player 9 and 10,” said Brad Arkin, the company's director for product security and privacy. “We are currently investigating this potential issue.”

Reader and Acrobat 9.1.2 are the most current versions of those applications.

An Adobe spokesman early confirmed that the vulnerability was an issue within Flash content that is inserted into a PDF (Portable Document Format) file. Users can drop Flash movies into PDF files, for instance.

VeriSign's iDefense said it spotted an in-the-wild attack exploiting the Flash zero-day, according to a target=”new” message posted to Twitter yesterday. “iDefense recently investigated a targeted attack using [a] embedded zero-day Flash exploit inside a PDF file,” the security intelligence company said.

Adobe has had its share of security problems this year, particularly with Reader, the popular PDF viewer. In mid-March, for example, it plugged several holes in Reader, including one that had been exploited by hackers since early January. Then in both May and June it followed that with further fixes to quash another Reader zero-day and patch another 13 bugs in the viewer.

Security was also at issue this week when Danish bug tracker Secunia noticed that Adobe continues to provide an outdated edition of Reader for download. Yesterday, Adobe reacted to Secunia's report by saying it was reevaluating how its software updater operated.

iDefense did not immediately respond to a request for more information on its findings, while Adobe's spokesman said details of the Flash-PDF vulnerability would be posted on the company's security blog when they are available.

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