Microsoft recently announced to come up with the launch of an out-of-band patch to fix susceptibility in Windows Animated Cursor Handling (ANI) that is claimed to be one of the most major vulnerability in years by some security specialists. The ANI bug that renders vulnerable to assault any webpage email or content that is able to download an animated cursor, enabling online hackers to sprint arbitrary code on the systems of users. Throughout the weekend ANI misuses snowballed, spoiling the weekend for several security experts acting in response to attacks. Last Friday, Secunia claimed that the flaw is awfully dangerous and eEye Digital announced a third-party fix to service those worried about giving protection to their systems ahead of Microsoft makes release of its sanctioned patch. As maintained by Ken Dunham of iDefense Labs, researchers have detected more than 150 malware samples making use of the flaw in the wild as of in the early hours of Sunday morning. He also told that a creepy-crawly, a Spam sprint and generation kits making use of the vulnerability now live in the wild.