Researcher discloses privilege escalation zero-day in Microsoft’s Data Sharing Service on Twitter and provides a proof-of-concept that could be used to deploy attacks in the wild.
Background
On October 23, a privilege escalation zero-day vulnerability in Microsoft’s Data Sharing Service (dssvc.dll), a broker for sharing data between applications, was published to Twitter. The researcher who published this vulnerability also released a zero-day exploit in Microsoft’s Windows Task Scheduler on Twitter in August 2018. As with the Task Scheduler vulnerability disclosed previously, the researcher shared a proof-of-concept (PoC) on GitHub.
Vulnerability details
The PoC shared by the researcher deletes files on the system that normally require administrative privileges. By deleting these files, the PoC demonstrates the bug is capable of elevating privileges. The PoC could be modified by an attacker to perform other tasks that require elevated privileges.
Please be advised that the PoC deletes a critical system file which can render the system inoperable.
According to initial reports, this vulnerability affects Windows 10, Windows Server 2016 and Windows Server 2019 systems. Also note this vulnerability requires that a malicious actor already have presence on an infected system (using malicious software) or utilize a separate vulnerability to establish a presence on a targeted system.
Urgently required actions
It is unclear if Microsoft will issue a patch for this vulnerability in time for the next Security Update in November 2018. Until a patch is available, we strongly encourage utilizing best security practices. This includes mitigation strategies, as attackers are likely to use malware when deploying this vulnerability. Additionally, ensure proper access control and network segmentation is in place.
Tenable’s Security Response team will update this blog post with protection information as soon as a patch becomes available.
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