Cybersecurity researchers are calling attention to a zero-day flaw in Microsoft Office that could be abused to achieve arbitrary code execution on affected Windows systems.

The vulnerability came to light after an independent cybersecurity research team known as nao_sec uncovered a Word document (“05-2022-0438.doc“) that was uploaded to VirusTotal from an IP address in Belarus.

“It uses Word’s external link to load the HTML and then uses the ‘ms-msdt’ scheme to execute PowerShell code,” the researchers noted in a series of tweets last week.

According to security researcher Kevin Beaumont, who dubbed the flaw “Follina,” the maldoc leverages Word’s remote template feature to fetch an HTML file from a server, which then makes use of the “ms-msdt://” URI scheme to run the malicious payload.

The shortcoming has been so named because the malicious sample references 0438, which is the area code of Follina, a municipality in the Italian city of Treviso.

MSDT is short for Microsoft Support Diagnostics Tool, a utility that’s used to troubleshoot and collect diagnostic data for analysis by support professionals to resolve a problem.

“There’s a lot going on here, but the first problem is Microsoft Word is executing the code via msdt (a support tool) even if macros are disabled,” Beaumont explained.

Protected View does kick in, although if you change the document to RTF form, it runs without even opening the document (via the preview tab in Explorer) let alone Protected View,” the researcher added.

In a standalone analysis, cybersecurity company Huntress Labs detailed the attack flow, noting the HTML file (“RDF842l.html”) that triggers the exploit originated from a now-unreachable domain named “xmlformats[.]com.”

“A Rich Text Format file (.RTF) could trigger the invocation of this exploit with just the Preview Pane within Windows Explorer,” Huntress Labs’ John Hammond said. “Much like CVE-2021-40444, this extends the severity of this threat by not just ‘single-click’ to exploit, but potentially with a ‘zero-click’ trigger.”

Multiple Microsoft Office versions, including Office, Office 2016, and Office 2021, are said to be affected, although other versions are expected to be vulnerable as well.

What’s more, Richard Warren of NCC Group managed to demonstrate an exploit on Office Professional Pro with April 2022 patches running on an up-to-date Windows 11 machine with the preview pane enabled.

“Microsoft are going to need to patch it across all the different product offerings, and security vendors will need robust detection and blocking,” Beaumont said. We have reached out to Microsoft for comment, and we’ll update the story once we hear back.