One of these zero-day vulnerabilities is of remote code executive (RCE) type, affecting Windows HTML and Microsoft Office. Microsoft has surprisingly not yet released a patch for CVE-2023-36884, opting instead to provide configuration mitigation methods, despite this being a Patch Tuesday rollout. Microsoft has connected the exploitation of this vulnerability to the Russian cybercrime group RomCom, which is suspected to be acting in the interests of Russian intelligence.
According to Rapid7 vulnerability risk management specialist Adam Barnett, the RomCom gang has also been linked to ransomware assaults that have been directed at a variety of targets. More such security experts are raising concerns given the number of vulnerabilities and the multiple zero-days that they are coming across, regarding which they are warning Windows users to adopt the updated versions promptly. The Microsoft Security Update Guide contains a comprehensive list of the vulnerabilities fixed by the most recent Patch Tuesday release. Security professionals have, however, drawn attention to some of the more crucial ones.
CVE-2023-36884
According to Microsoft, “investigating reports of a series of remote code execution vulnerabilities impacting Windows and Office products. Microsoft is aware of targeted attacks that attempt to exploit these vulnerabilities by using specially-crafted Microsoft Office documents.”
While this vulnerability is still unpatched, Microsoft says it will “take the appropriate action to help protect our customers” ones they are done with the investigations. However, speculations claims that this will happen via an out-of-band security update rather than leaving an actively exploited zero-day up for patch for next month’s Patch Tuesday rollout. Microsoft directs users to a threat intelligence blog article that offers workaround mitigations in the meantime.
CVE-2023-32046
This flaw is a Windows MSHTML platform elevation of privilege vulnerability that is being exploited. The zero-day flaw exploits the MSHTML core Windows components, that are used to produce content like HTML.
According to Kev Breen, director of cyber threat research at Immersive Labs, “This is not limited to browsers.” He warns, “other applications like Office, Outlook, and Skype also make use of this component.” It is likely that the attack vectors would include typical suspects—a malicious document attached to an email or a malicious website or web page. . “This vulnerability would likely be used as an initial infection vector[…]allowing the attacker to gain code execution in the context of the user clicking the link or opening the document,” says Breen.