Microsoft has issued
a hefty 11 bulletins addressing 26 vulnerabilities in its August security
release. The monthly security update includes six bulletins that address issues
rated 'critical', the highest of Microsoft's security alert levels. Four of the
critical bulletins addressed vulnerabilities in Office. Those patches included
fixes for an ActiveX control in Office 2003 and older, flaws in Office filters,
Powerpoint and Excel. All four could be used by an attacker to remotely execute
code. The company also fixed remote code vulnerabilities in the Image Color
Management software for Windows 2000, XP and Server 2003. The remaining critical
bulletin was
an
update to a previous patch for Internet Explorer 6 and 7. The five remaining
vulnerabilities were all rated 'important'. Those included fixes for remote code
flaws in Word and information disclosure risks in Outlook and Windows Messenger.
Also fixed was an information disclosure flaw in the IPSec software for Windows
Vista and Server, as well as a remote code execution vulnerability in the
Windows Event System component for all versions of the operating system.