Critical vulnerability found in popular VLC Media Player

Danish security company Secunia has found a flaw in the VLC Media Player that could allow an attacker to gain control of someone's (Windows) PC.

The problem, which Secunia ranks as "highly critical," affects version 0.8.6h on Windows. Secunia said in an advisory that version 0.8.6i should be released soon.


The flaw is an integer overflow error, which can be exploited to cause a heap-based buffer overflow, a type of problem in how the program allocates memory. Secunia said it can be exploited by creating a specially-crafted ".WAV" sound file, which would the allow a hacker to run other code on the PC.

VLC Media Player is a free, open-source program released under the GNU General Public License by the VideoLAN project. The player can handle video files in MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, DivX, MP3 and OGG formats, among others.

The project also develops a streaming media server for several platforms. The VLC software has been download close to 90 million times, according to the project's Web site.

Secunia notified the VideoLAN project on June 30 and advised that until the update is released, users should be wary of untrusted ".WAV" files.




GLSA 200805-22 MPlayer: User-assisted execution of arbitrary code
Researcher slams Adobe for ‘epidemic’ of JavaScript bugs