Print Spooler Service Impersonation Vulnerability
Publish date: July 21, 2015
Severity: CRITICAL
CVE Identifier: CVE-2010-2729
Advisory Date: JUL 21, 2015
DESCRIPTION
The Print Spooler service in Microsoft Windows XP SP2 and SP3, Windows Server 2003 SP2, Windows Vista SP1 and SP2, Windows Server 2008 Gold, SP2, and R2, and Windows 7, when printer sharing is enabled, does not properly validate spooler access permissions, which allows remote attackers to create files in a system directory, and consequently execute arbitrary code, by sending a crafted print request over RPC, as exploited in the wild in September 2010, aka "Print Spooler Service Impersonation Vulnerability."
TREND MICRO PROTECTION INFORMATION
Apply associated Trend Micro DPI Rules.
SOLUTION
Trend Micro Deep Security DPI Rule Number: 1004401
Trend Micro Deep Security DPI Rule Name: 1004401 - Print Spooler Service Impersonation Vulnerability
AFFECTED SOFTWARE AND VERSION
- microsoft windows_7 -
- microsoft windows_server_2003
- microsoft windows_server_2008
- microsoft windows_server_2008 -
- microsoft windows_server_2008 r2
- microsoft windows_vista
- microsoft windows_vista -
- microsoft windows_xp
- microsoft windows_xp -
Featured Stories
- Beware of MCP Hardcoded Credentials: A Perfect Target for Threat ActorsPoor secret management in MCP servers can lead to serious consequences, including data breaches and supply chain attacks. This article examines the reality of these unsecure configurations and offers practical recommendations that minimize the chances of exposure.Read more
- Lessons in Resilience from the Race to Patch SharePoint VulnerabilitiesIn this article, Trend Micro discusses how the fast-moving attacks using CVE-2025-53770 and CVE-2025-53771 have underscored the essential role of virtual patching and reliable intelligence in protecting organizations against evolving threats.Read more
- Unveiling AI Agent Vulnerabilities Part V: Securing LLM ServicesTo conclude our series on agentic AI, this article examines emerging vulnerabilities that threaten AI agents, focusing on providing proactive security recommendations on areas such as code execution, data exfiltration, and database access.Read more
- Unveiling AI Agent Vulnerabilities Part IV: Database Access VulnerabilitiesHow can attackers exploit weaknesses in database-enabled AI agents? This research explores how SQL generation vulnerabilities, stored prompt injection, and vector store poisoning can be weaponized by attackers for fraudulent activities.Read more