The creator of a widely used hacking tool has promised to publish details on one browser vulnerability per day for the month of July.HD Moore, the hacker behind the Metasploit toolkit, began publishing software that demonstrates bugs in a variety of Web browsers on July 1. He has dubbed his effort the Month of Browser Bugs.Moore said he decided to do the month of bugs in order to show the kinds of results he’s generated using a variety of automated security testing tools known as “fuzzers.” 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 “This information is being published to create awareness about the types of bugs that plague modern browsers and to demonstrate the techniques I used to discover them,” Moore said in a Sunday blog posting. The Month of Browser Bugs code does not include details that would allow attackers to run unauthorized code on a victim’s machine, Moore said.To date, the security researcher has published information on bugs he found in Internet Explorer, Firefox and Apple Computer’s Safari browser. Microsoft has had an advance look at the bugs, and some of them can cause the browser to crash, said Stephen Toulouse, security program manager with Microsoft’s security response center. Others have been fixed in previous security updates, he said. Some of the bugs were fixed in Microsoft’s recent MS06-021 security update, Moore said in an e-mail interview, but “the actual details of these bugs have not been made public,” he said.The relationship between Microsoft and Moore—a speaker at Microsoft’s homegrown Blue Hat hacker conference—has been strained of late. Two weeks ago, the security researcher blasted Microsoft for implying that he had been irresponsible in his disclosure of another Microsoft flaw—this one concerning a recently patched vulnerability in the Remote Access Connection Manager service used by Windows to create network connections over the telephone. Moore published his code nine days after the bug was patched, but Microsoft criticized the disclosure, saying it came too soon.This criticism did not sit well with Moore. “Microsoft is doing themselves a disservice by asking for vulnerability information on one hand and then condemning the folks who provide it with the other,” he said in a blog posting, adding that the software vendor “obviously has some communication issues to resolve.”Thirty-one new browser bugs will certainly get Moore some attention, but the disclosures are not going to suddenly make the Web less safe for people who “practice reasonably safe surfing” and avoid suspicious websites, said Russ Cooper, a senior information security analyst at Cybertrust. “Saying we are at risk due to browser vulnerabilities is akin to saying we are at risk due to being in a car,” he said via instant message. “Yes, this is true … but you can certainly reduce the risk of harm while in a car through reasonable knowledge, use and maintenance. The same is true with browsers.”-Robert McMillan, IDG News Service (San Francisco Bureau)Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content news Oracle bolsters distributed cloud, AI strategy with new Mexico cloud region The second cloud region in Monterrey, providing over 100 OCI services, is part of Oracle's plan to compete with AWS, Google and Microsoft, and cash in on enterprise interest in generative AI. By Anirban Ghoshal Sep 26, 2023 3 mins Generative AI Generative AI Generative AI brandpost Zero Trust: Understanding the US government’s requirements for enhanced cybersecurity By Jaye Tillson, Field CTO at HPE Aruba Networking Sep 26, 2023 4 mins Zero Trust feature SAP prepares to add Joule generative AI copilot across its apps Like Salesforce and ServiceNow, SAP is promising to embed an AI copilot throughout its applications, but planning a more gradual roll-out than some competitors. By Peter Sayer Sep 26, 2023 5 mins CIO SAP Generative AI brandpost Mitigating mayhem in a complex hybrid IT world How to build a resilient enterprise in the face of unexpected (and expected) IT mayhem moments. By Greg Lotko, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Mainframe Software Division Sep 26, 2023 7 mins Hybrid Cloud 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