Microsoft is readying an update to Internet Explorer following the recent discovery of two unpatched IE vulnerabilities, including one bug that could allow attackers to seize control of a victim’s PC.“We’re working on an update to Internet Explorer, and that update is currently in our testing process and could come out as early as April,” said Stephen Toulouse, a security program manager with Microsoft’s security response center. “However there’s no firm date.”The most significant of the two vulnerabilities was discovered earlier this month by Web developer Jeffrey van der Stad. He claims to have discovered a way for attackers to trick Internet Explorer into executing HTA (HTML application) files without the user’s permission. HTA is a Microsoft-created format that is used to create HTML-based applications. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe Victims could have their systems compromised by visiting a website that contained the malicious code, van der Stad said. “With a specially designed website, it is possible to execute such a file without any prompt,” he said. Van der Stad has not published technical details of his bug, but Microsoft has been able to reproduce the problem and is hoping to have it patched in its next IE release, he said.A bug that let attackers launch unauthorized HTML applications could be exploited to seize control of a Windows system, according to Russ Cooper, a senior information security analyst at Cybertrust. “Just think of it as an executable,” he said. Still, Cooper believes that because of the difficulties involved in first tricking users into visiting a malicious website, it is unlikely that this bug will ever be exploited in a widespread fashion. “You need a website, and it needs to stay up, or you have to keep changing it, which means changing the [malicious link] to it you sent everyone,” he said.Toulouse would not comment on whether Microsoft considered the bug to be severe, saying that this information would “put customers at risk by providing attackers [with] information before the update is available.”He also did not say whether he expected this problem to be patched during the company’s next group of security updates, scheduled for April 11. However, Microsoft has confirmed that it is investigating a separate IE vulnerability that could cause its browser to crash. Code that takes advantage of this vulnerability has already been published on the Internet. But because the bug does not appear to cause anything worse than a browser crash, it is not considered to be critical, according to security vendors.Microsoft has confirmed that this bug can crash IE, the company said in a note published Tuesday.Check out Van der Stad’s comments on the bug he discovered, which he calls “Grasshopper.” -Robert McMillan, IDG News ServiceThis article is posted on our Microsoft Informer page. For more news on the Redmond, Wash.-based powerhouse, keep checking in.For related coverage, read Microsoft to Preview IE, Atlas at MIX 06.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer for more updated news coverage. Related content feature The year’s top 10 enterprise AI trends — so far In 2022, the big AI story was the technology emerging from research labs and proofs-of-concept, to it being deployed throughout enterprises to get business value. This year started out about the same, with slightly better ML algorithms and improved d By Maria Korolov Sep 21, 2023 16 mins Machine Learning Machine Learning Artificial Intelligence opinion 6 deadly sins of enterprise architecture EA is a complex endeavor made all the more challenging by the mistakes we enterprise architects can’t help but keep making — all in an honest effort to keep the enterprise humming. By Peter Wayner Sep 21, 2023 9 mins Enterprise Architecture IT Strategy Software Development opinion CIOs worry about Gen AI – for all the right reasons Generative AI is poised to be the most consequential information technology of the decade. Plenty of promise. But expect novel new challenges to your enterprise data platform. By Mike Feibus Sep 20, 2023 7 mins CIO Generative AI Artificial Intelligence brandpost How Zero Trust can help align the CIO and CISO By Jaye Tillson, Field CTO at HPE Aruba Networking Sep 20, 2023 4 mins Zero Trust Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe