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securityvulnsSecurityvulnsSECURITYVULNS:DOC:28781
HistoryDec 02, 2012 - 12:00 a.m.

NGS000268 Technical Advisory: Symantec Messaging Gateway - Out-of-band stored-XSS delivered by email

2012-12-0200:00:00
vulners.com
13

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Summary

Name: Symantec Messaging Gateway - Out-of-band stored-XSS delivered by email
Release Date: 30 November 2012
Reference: NGS00268
Discoverer: Ben Williams <[email protected]>
Vendor: Symantec
Vendor Reference:
Systems Affected: Symantec Messaging Gateway 9.5.3-3
Risk: Critical
Status: Published

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TimeLine

Discovered: 17 April 2012
Released: 17 April 2012
Approved: 29 April 2012
Reported: 30 April 2012
Fixed: 27 August 2012
Published: 30 November 2012

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Description

I. VULNERABILITY

Symantec Messaging Gateway 9.5.3-3 - Out-of-band stored-XSS - delivered by email

II. BACKGROUND

Symantec Messaging Gateway 9.5.3-3 is the latest version, of their Email Security Appliance

III. DESCRIPTION

This issue means that an attacker can construct a malicious email message, containing arbitrary javascript in the subject line. When the message audit log is viewed (by an administrator) the script will execute in the context of the logged in admin.

This is a very serious issue, because the attack vector is a spam email, and the admin only has to view the messages in the audit log for the payload to execute. (Payloads could include any management or reconfiguration actions within the UI, or redirecting the user to other malicious content)

Additionally, the spam email containing the script can easily be made invisible within the UI, and/or damage the rendering of the UI to prevent itself from being noticed.

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Technical Details

IV. PROOF OF CONCEPT

There are several ways to exploit this issue, here is an example using a script in the subject line, to produce a pop-up:

For example a message can be sent with the following subject line:

Something boring here…"><script>alert('Something nasty')</script>

Which could be sent with an automated script for example:

./sendEmail -s 192.168.1.59:25 -u "Something boring here…\"><script>alert('Something nasty')</script>" -f [email protected] -t [email protected] -o message-file=spam1.txt
(the body can contain any content)

Many thousands of messages can be sent in this way, until one is viewed by an administrator.

The message audit viewer affected is here:
http://192.168.1.59:41080/brightmail/status/message-audit/MessageAuditFlow$show.flo

This produces a test example pop-up when the message audit log is viewed
(Obviously, a "pop-up" is not the issue, this is just a proof of concept).

The issue is that the attacker can send an email message with any arbitrary javascript (or pull in javascript from another server) to perform actions within the UI, manage or reconfigure the device (with request forgery), disable protections or shutdown the appliance for example, perform session-hijacking or redirect the administrator to other malicious content.

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Fix Information

An updated version of the software has been released to address the vulnerability:

http://www.symantec.com/security_response/securityupdates/detail.jsp?fid=security_advisory&amp;pvid=security_advisory&amp;year=2012&amp;suid=20120827_00

NCC Group Research
http://www.nccgroup.com/research

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