Warning — Widely Popular ImageMagick Tool Vulnerable to Remote Code Execution
May 04, 2016
   A serious zero-day vulnerability has been discovered in  ImageMagick , a widely popular software tool used by a large number of websites to process user's photos, which could allow hackers to execute malicious code remotely on servers.   ImageMagick is an open-source image processing library that lets users resize, scale, crop, watermarking and tweak images.   The ImageMagick tool is supported by many programming languages, including Perl, C++, PHP, Python, Ruby and is being deployed by Millions of websites, blogs, social media platforms, and popular content management systems (CMS) such as WordPress and Drupal.   Slack security engineer Ryan Huber disclosed a zero-day flaw (CVE-2016–3714)  in the ImageMagick image processing library that allows a hacker to execute malicious code on a Web server by uploading maliciously-crafted image.   For example, by uploading a booby-trapped selfie to a web service that uses ImageMagick, an attacker can execute malicious code on the website...