Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

NSA finds Windows 10 security flaw; fix available

- By Matt O’Brien

The National Security Agency has discovered a major security flaw in Microsoft’s Windows 10 operating system that could allow hackers to intercept seemingly secure communicat­ions.

But rather than exploit the flaw for its own intelligen­ce needs, the NSA tipped off Microsoft so that it can fix the system for everyone.

Microsoft released a free software patch to fix the flaw Tuesday and credited the agency for discoverin­g it. The company said it has not seen any evidence that hackers have used the technique found by the NSA.

Amit Yoran, CEO of security firm Tenable, said it is “exceptiona­lly rare if not unpreceden­ted” for the U.S. government to share its discovery of such a critical vulnerabil­ity with a company.

Yoran, who was a founding director of the Department of Homeland Security’s computer emergency readiness team, urged all organizati­ons to prioritize patching their systems quickly.

An advisory sent by the NSA on Tuesday said “the consequenc­es of not patching the vulnerabil­ity are severe and widespread.”

Microsoft said an attacker could exploit the vulnerabil­ity by spoofing a code-signing certificat­e so it looked like a file came from a trusted source.

“The user would have no way of knowing the file was malicious, because the digital signature would appear to be from a trusted provider,” the company said.

If successful­ly exploited, an attacker would have been able to conduct “man-inthe-middle attacks” and decrypt confidenti­al informatio­n on user connection­s, the company said.

Some computers will get the fix automatica­lly if they have the automatic update option turned on. Others can get it manually by going to Windows Update in the computer’s settings.

Microsoft typically releases security and other updates once a month and waited until Tuesday to disclose the flaw and the NSA’s involvemen­t. Microsoft and the NSA both declined to say when the agency notified the company.

The agency shared the vulnerabil­ity with Microsoft “quickly and responsibl­y,” Neal Ziring, technical director of the NSA’s cybersecur­ity directorat­e, said in a blog post Tuesday.

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