Microsoft scrambles to fix Windows 11 'aCropalypse' privacy-battering bug

All your previously Snipping Tool cropped images aren't, basically

Updated Microsoft is said to be preparing to fix the high-profile "aCropalypse" privacy bug in its Snipping Tool for Windows 11.

Users can remove sensitive information or some other parts of photos, screenshots, and other images by cropping them using the Snipping Tool app. The problem is that for the Windows 11 app – as well as Microsoft's Snip & Sketch cropping tool in Windows 10 – the file of the cropped image still includes the cropped out portions, which can be recovered and viewed.

A similar flaw was found in Google's Markup image-editing app for its Pixel smartphones. According to reverse engineers Simon Aarons and David Buchanan – who named the bug aCropalyse – the problem affects Pixel smartphones since 2018, when the 3 series came out. Google patched its code to avoid leaking cropped areas of images.

Then this week, Buchanan confirmed that the Windows Snipping Tool and Snip & Sketch software had the same issue. If a user cropped a photo or other image using the software and then saved the edited image over the original file, that file still contains the cropped-out portion. The area isn't visible when viewing the image using normal tools, but the data is still there in the file, and can be restored and viewed using appropriate recovery software.

Steven Murdoch, a professor of security engineering at the UK's University College London, shared some thoughts here on the underlying issue within Windows, specifically its latest Save File API, which he described as "defective by design."

We're saved .. soon!

A Windows Insider who goes by the handle XenoPanther observed that Microsoft may have fixed the problem already. The Windows giant created version 11.2302.20.0 of the Snipping Tool app – the current stable version is 11.2302.4.0 – and is releasing it in the Windows Insider Canary channel for testing.

The Register has asked Microsoft for a response and will add it to the story if one comes back.

It's unclear when Microsoft intends to release the updated Snipping Tool app to all users – or if a fix is coming for the flaw in Windows 10 – though the quick reaction to the initial report indicates that Redmond is eager to get this sorted quickly.

Meanwhile, if you've used Microsoft's code to crop your snaps and then shared them on, be aware someone with a copy of them might be able to recover the lopped-off portions. ®

Updated at 13.31 BST on March 27 2023 to add:

Microsoft late last week outlined fixes for both the Snipping Tool app in Windows 11 and Snip and Sketch in Windows 10.

"We have released a security update for these tools via CVE-2023-28303. We recommend customers apply the update," a Microsoft spokesperson told The Register.

In its note, Microsoft said that while the severity level for the vulnerability is low, it's still a problem. "When an existing image is partially overwritten, an attacker may be able to recover parts of the original image through the use of a special tool," the vendor wrote.

The update fixing the problem in Snipping Tool is contained in app versions 11.2302.20.0 and later. For Snip and Sketch, it's app versions 10.2008.3001.0 and later.

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