Lost productivity rather than attacks the real risk from ATL Issues
Thursday, July 30th, 2009by Peter Tippett and David Kennedy
The acetaminophen and antacid consumption in enterprise IT staffs is likely on the increase due to the recent release of two Security Bulletins by Microsoft, one for Internet Explorer and one for Visual Studio. This security problem has the potential to be both far-reaching and subtle in nature. We would like to offer a dose of reason in hopes that your stress-induced ailments will at least be caused by wrestling with the real problem. The biggest risk is not from attacks; lost productivity dealing with the scope and confusion around the ATL issue is the greatest risk from these announcements.
To be clear, we do expect attacks but do not believe they will be novel or pervasive. We have seen hundreds of browser vulnerabilities over the years and the pattern of successful exploits is well understood: such attacks mainly result in home-user machines being absorbed into large-scale botnets. Our series of Data Breach Investigations Reports, covering nearly 600 breaches studied over five years, consistently finds that browser vulnerabilities rarely contribute (even incidentally) to significant enterprise data breaches.




