Computing Center

  1. Home
  2. Electronics & Gadgets
  3. Computing Center

Attacks Target Veritas Backup Exec Flaw

Unpatched vulnerability could allows an attacker to gain access to a system and download files.

Robert McMillan, IDG News Service

Attackers are reported to be exploiting an unpatched vulnerability in Symantec's Veritas Backup Exec Agent for Windows software, according to an alert published late last week by Symantec.

A flaw in the product's Network Data Management Protocol agent could allow an attacker to gain access to the system and download files, the Fr-SIRT (French Security Incident Response Team) said in a statement Friday.

Fr-SIRT rates the vulnerability as "critical."

No Patches Available

Symantec, which acquired Veritas in July of this year, says it is "not aware of any vendor-supplied patches for this issue," according to its alert.

The company recommends that users block access to the TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) port that uses the service in question, port 10000.

The Metasploit penetration testing toolkit already takes advantage of this vulnerability, and there are reports that exploits for the flaw are already being used by attackers, Symantec says.

The SANS Internet Storm Center said on its Web site on Friday that it has seen a jump in scans for port 10000, and it advises Backup Exec users to block access to that port from all untrusted network.

The flaw affects versions 8.x, 9.0, 9.1, and 10.0 of Backup Exec for Windows Servers, Fr-SIRT said.

Explore Computing Center

About.com Special Features

Computing Center

  1. Home
  2. Electronics & Gadgets
  3. Computing Center
  4. Software/Services
  5. Software
  6. Utilities
  7. Backup Utilities
  8. Attacks Target Veritas Backup Exec Flaw

©2009 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company.

All rights reserved.