| Two flaws were found in the way Firefox/Thunderbird processed certain regular
expressions. A malicious web page/HTML email could crash the browser or
possibly execute arbitrary code as the user running
Firefox/Thunderbird. (CVE-2006-4565, CVE-2006-4566)
A number of flaws were found in Firefox/Thunderbird. A malicious web
page/HTML email could crash the browser or possibly execute arbitrary code
as the user running Firefox/Thunderbird. (CVE-2006-4571)
A flaw was found in the handling of JavaScript timed events. A malicious
web page could crash the browser or possibly execute arbitrary code as the
user running Firefox/Thunderbird. (CVE-2006-4253)
A flaw was found in the Firefox/Thunderbird auto-update verification
system. An attacker who has the ability to spoof a victim's DNS could get
Firefox to download and install malicious code. In order to exploit this
issue an attacker would also need to get a victim to previously accept an
unverifiable certificate. (CVE-2006-4567)
Firefox did not properly prevent a frame in one domain from injecting
content into a sub-frame that belongs to another domain, which facilitates
website spoofing and other attacks (CVE-2006-4568)
Firefox did not load manually opened, blocked popups in the right domain
context, which could lead to cross-site scripting attacks. In order to
exploit this issue an attacker would need to find a site which would frame
their malicious page and convince the user to manually open a blocked
popup. (CVE-2006-4569) |