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Security holes found in Oracle software

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Despite the vendor's claims, Oracle's Oracle9i database is breakable, a U.K. security firm reported Wednesday.

Several security flaws were discovered in the company's software, including one that could allow a hacker to gain access to Oracle's database server without a user ID or password. The flaws were discovered by a security expert from Next Generation Security Software in Sutton, U.K.

Oracle said Wednesday that it was first informed about the flaws in December and has already made available patches and workarounds.

"No Oracle customers have reported issues stemming from these bugs," the company said in a statement.

The co-founder of Next Generation Security Software, David Litchfield, gave details of the flaws on Wednesday, after announcing in December that he had discovered them. Litchfield is expected to present a paper on his work at an upcoming Black Hat security conference, according to an Oracle spokeswoman.

The vulnerability that allows attackers to access a database server without authorization also allows the attacker to execute a function in that software from a remote location. It affects Oracle9i and Oracle8i database servers running on all operating systems, according to the security advisory.

A second flaw could allow attackers to run arbitrary code or perform a denial-of-service attack on the Oracle9i application server running on Sun's Solaris 2.6 operating system for SPARC processors, Microsoft's Windows NT and Windows 2000 Server operating systems, and Hewlett-Packard's HP-UX Version 11.0 operating system for 32-bit operating systems, according to the advisory.

Another vulnerability enables an attacker to view the source code of Java Server Pages when they are downloaded from Oracle9i application servers running on all operating systems. Those files often display information such as the database user ID and password.

The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.

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