(MS10-048) Vulnerabilities in Windows Kernel-Mode Drivers Could Allow Elevation of Privilege (2160329)
Publish date: February 04, 2011
Severity: HIGH
CVE Identifier: CVE-2010-1887,CVE-2010-1894,CVE-2010-1895,CVE-2010-1896,CVE-2010-1897
Advisory Date: FEB 04, 2011
DESCRIPTION
This update addresses one publicly disclosed and four privately reported vulnerabilities in the Windows kernel-mode drivers. The most serious of these may allow elevation of privilege if an unauthorized user logs on to an affected system and runs a specific malicious application.
An attacker needs valid logon credentials and must be able to log on locally to exploit this vulnerability. The vulnerability could not be exploited remotely or by anonymous users.
TREND MICRO PROTECTION INFORMATION
For information on patches specific to the affected software, please proceed to the Microsoft Web page.
AFFECTED SOFTWARE AND VERSION
- Windows XP Service Pack 3
- Windows XP Professional x64 Edition Service Pack 2
- Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2
- Windows Server 2003 x64 Edition Service Pack 2
- Windows Server 2003 with SP2 for Itanium-based Systems
- Windows Vista Service Pack 1 and Windows Vista Service Pack 2
- Windows Vista x64 Edition Service Pack 1 and Windows Vista x64 Edition Service Pack 2
- Windows Server 2008 for 32-bit Systems and Windows Server 2008 for 32-bit Systems Service Pack 2
- Windows Server 2008 for x64-based Systems and Windows Server 2008 for x64-based Systems Service Pack 2
- Windows Server 2008 for Itanium-based Systems and Windows Server 2008 for Itanium-based Systems Service Pack 2
- Windows 7 for 32-bit Systems
- Windows 7 for x64-based Systems
- Windows Server 2008 R2 for x64-based Systems
- Windows Server 2008 R2 for Itanium-based Systems
Featured Stories
When AI Becomes a Zero-Day Machine: What Public Sector Organizations Need to KnowClaude Mythos Preview shows how AI can rapidly discover and weaponize zero-day vulnerabilities—transforming once human-scale threats into machine-speed attacks. As these capabilities spread, public sector organizations must rely on trusted, proactive defenders like TrendAI™ ZDI to stay ahead of an AI-driven threat landscape.Read more
Hunt Them All: An AI-Powered Vulnerability Sweep of 19,000 MCP ServersIn this research, we analyzed over 19,000 open-source MCP server repositories to uncover how much AI-generated code they contain and how many harbor exploitable vulnerabilities.Read more
Update on Exposed MCP Servers: The Threat Widens to the CloudExposed Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers have become powerful vectors for cloud attacks, enabling threat actors to not only access sensitive data but also take control of the cloud services themselves.Read more
Old Vulnerabilities, New AI Era, Amplified Risk: How Outdated Flaws Continue to Fuel the N-Day Exploit MarketEven as AI adoption accelerates, old exploits remain overlooked weaknesses. Underground trends show a renewed demand for exploits, with cybercriminals relying on aging but still effective vulnerabilities. We examine this blind spot and why long-standing issues need to be addressed.Read more