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Microsoft is prepping four bulletins -- each to address one vulnerability -- as part of the software giant's November security update coming Tuesday.
Expected to remain outstanding this patch cycle is the zero-day, Windows kernel flaw believed to be connected to Duqu, the so-called "son of Stuxnet" trojan, according to experts.
Microsoft said it is working to address the issue, though it has not provided a timeline for a fix nor publicly confirmed the vulnerability.
One of the bulletins Microsoft plans to release is rated “critical,” Microsoft's highest bug severity rating, reserved for flaws that could allow the propagation of an internet worm without user action, according to Microsoft's advance notification, released Thursday.
Two other patches are deemed “important,” as they could lead to remote code execution and elevation of privileges, while one is rated “moderate” and could allow for denial-of-service.
All of the patches impact Windows and will require a reboot.
As for Duqu, Microsoft will likely issue an advisory within the next day or so and provide a hotfix for the flaw, said Paul Henry, security and forensic analyst at endpoint security software firm Lumension.
“While many dispute the threat imposed by this bug, no one disputes the risk of the zero-day vulnerability in Microsoft software that it takes advantage of,” Henry said.
Some security experts are at odds over whether Duqu should be considered as worrisome as Stuxnet.
This article originally appeared at scmagazineus.com
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