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vendor:
Outlook Express
by:
SecurityFocus
7.5
CVSS
HIGH
Address Book Misleading Entry
200
CWE
Product Name: Outlook Express
Affected Version From: Outlook Express 5.0
Affected Version To: Outlook Express 6.0
Patch Exists: NO
Related CWE: N/A
CPE: a:microsoft:outlook_express
Metasploit: N/A
Other Scripts: N/A
Tags: N/A
CVSS Metrics: N/A
Nuclei References: N/A
Nuclei Metadata: N/A
Platforms Tested: Windows
2001

Outlook Express Address Book Misleading Entry Vulnerability

An attacker may construct a message header that tricks Address Book into making an entry for an untrusted user under the guise of a trusted one. This is done by sending a message with a misleading 'From:' field. When the message is replied to then Address Book will make an entry which actually replies to the attacker.

Mitigation:

Users should be aware of the potential for malicious emails to be sent with misleading headers. It is also recommended that users do not reply to emails from unknown sources.
Source

Exploit-DB raw data:

source: https://www.securityfocus.com/bid/2823/info

Outlook Express is the standard e-mail client that is shipped with Microsoft Windows 9x/ME/NT.

The address book in Outlook Express is normally configured to make entries for all addresses that are replied to by the user of the mail client. An attacker may construct a message header that tricks Address Book into making an entry for an untrusted user under the guise of a trusted one. This is done by sending a message with a misleading "From:" field. When the message is replied to then Address Book will make an entry which actually replies to the attacker. 

Situation: 2 good users Target1 and Target2 with addresses target1@example.com and
target2@example.com and one bad user Attacker, attacker@example.com. Imagine Attacker wants to get
messages Target1 sends to Target2. Scenario:

1. Attacker composes message with headers:

From: "target2@example.com" <attacker@example.com>
Reply-To: "target2@example.com" <attacker@example.com>
To: Target1 <target1@example.com>
Subject: how to catch you on Friday?

and sends it to target1@example.com

2. Target1 receives mail, which looks absolutely like mail received from
target2@example.com and replies it. Reply will be received by Attacker. In this case
new entry is created in address book pointing NAME "target2@example.com" to
ADDRESS attacker@example.com.

3. Now, if while composing new message Target1 directly types e-mail
address target2@example.com instead of Target2, Outlook will compose address as
"target2@example.com" <attacker@example.com> and message will be received by Attacker.