Sophos News

Firefox 111 patches 11 holes, but not 1 zero-day among them…

Heard of cricket (the sport, not the insect)?

It’s much like baseball, except that batters can hit the ball wherever they like, including backwards or sideways; bowlers can hit the batter with the ball on purpose (within certain safety limits, of course – it just wouldn’t be cricket otherwise) without kicking off a 20-minute all-in brawl; there’s almost always a break in the middle of the afternoon for tea and cake; and you can score six runs at a time as long as you hit the ball high and far enough (seven if the bowler makes a mistake as well).

Well, as cricket enthusiasts know, 111 runs is a superstitious score, considered inauspicious by many – the cricketer’s equivalent of Macbeth to an actor.

It’s known as a Nelson, though nobody actually seems to know why.

Today therefore sees Firefox’s Nelson release, with version 111.0 coming out, but there doesn’t seem to be anything inauspicious about this one.

Eleven individual patches, and two batches-of-patches

As usual, there are numerous security patches in the update, including Mozilla’s usual combo-CVE vulnerability numbers for potentially exploitable bugs that were found automatically and patched without waiting to see if a proof-of-concept (PoC) exploit was possible:

These bags-of-bugs have been rated High rather than Critical.

Mozilla admits that “we presume that with enough effort some of these could have been exploited to run arbitrary code”, but no one has yet figured out how to do so, or even if such exploits are feasible.

None of the other eleven CVE-numbered bugs this month were worse thah High; three of them apply to Firefox for Android only; and no one has yet (so far as we yet know) come up with a PoC exploit that shows how to abuse them in real life.

Two notably interesting vulnerabilities appear amongst the 11, namely:

What to do?

Most Firefox users will get the update automatically, typically after a random delay to stop everyone’s computer downloading at the same moment…

…but you can avoid the wait by manually using Help > About (or Firefox > About Firefox on a Mac) on a laptop, or by forcing an App Store or Google Play update on a mobile device.

(If you’re a Linux user and Firefox is supplied by the maker of your distro, do a system update to check for the availability of the new version.)