Several vulnerabilities have been found in the Iceape internet suite, an unbranded version of Seamonkey: CVE-2011-2372 Mariusz Mlynski discovered that websites could open a download dialog — which has open as the default action —, while a user presses the ENTER key. CVE-2011-2995 Benjamin Smedberg, Bob Clary and Jesse Ruderman discovered crashes in the rendering engine, which could lead to the execution of arbitrary code. CVE-2011-2998 Mark Kaplan discovered an integer underflow in the JavaScript engine, which could lead to the execution of arbitrary code. CVE-2011-2999 Boris Zbarsky discovered that incorrect handling of the window.location object could lead to bypasses of the same-origin policy. CVE-2011-3000 Ian Graham discovered that multiple Location headers might lead to CRLF injection. The oldstable distribution (lenny) is not affected. The iceape package only provides the XPCOM code. For the stable distribution (squeeze), this problem has been fixed in version 2.0.11-8. This update also marks the compromised DigiNotar root certs as revoked rather then untrusted. For the unstable distribution (sid), this problem has been fixed in version 2.0.14-8. We recommend that you upgrade your iceape packages.
Several vulnerabilities have been found in the Iceape internet suite, an unbranded version of Seamonkey:
Mariusz Mlynski discovered that websites could open a download
dialog — which has open
as the default action —, while a user
presses the ENTER key.
Benjamin Smedberg, Bob Clary and Jesse Ruderman discovered crashes in the rendering engine, which could lead to the execution of arbitrary code.
Mark Kaplan discovered an integer underflow in the JavaScript engine, which could lead to the execution of arbitrary code.
Boris Zbarsky discovered that incorrect handling of the window.location object could lead to bypasses of the same-origin policy.
Ian Graham discovered that multiple Location headers might lead to CRLF injection.
The oldstable distribution (lenny) is not affected. The iceape package only provides the XPCOM code.
For the stable distribution (squeeze), this problem has been fixed in version 2.0.11-8. This update also marks the compromised DigiNotar root certs as revoked rather then untrusted.
For the unstable distribution (sid), this problem has been fixed in version 2.0.14-8.
We recommend that you upgrade your iceape packages.