Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

  Recent Software News
Microsoft posts critical configurat...
Apple ships Mac OS X update
TrueCrypt 3.0
GMail Drive 1.04
Christmas Discount on SmartSync Pro
  Recent Gaming News
Electronic Arts to buy into Ubi Sof...
Halo 2, San Andreas key drivers of ...
Sony Says All Systems Go for PSP La...
Nvidia to work on PlayStation 3 chi...
New Command & Conquer Game Unveiled
  Recent Reviews
 · CoolerMaster Aerogate 3 A...
 · CoolerMaster AquaGate Wat...
 · OCZ Copper BGA Ramsinks
 · Mapower Warps Portable 3....
 · Vantec - PCI & RAM Slot P...
  Recent Forum Posts
Windows XP Sp2 Problems
Leadtek A350XT TDH and overclo...
FX5900U vs 9800Pro
Google Gmail Invites
Doom 3 SDK Released
  Announcement

Welcome to AusPCWorld - Australia's Leading PC Technology News & Reviews site.



> AusPCWorld > Tech News > Banner Ads Serving Up MyDoom






   
Banner Ads Serving Up MyDoom
Posted by mitchy_g on 23 Nov 2004 - 00:08 0 comments
Previous Post | Tech News | Next Post
 
A chilling turn in the war against viruses appeared over the weekend. It looks like viruses are now being spread unsuspectingly through Web sites via compromised ad servers.

The SANS Institute Internet Storm Center on Saturday reported that a 'high profile UK website' was among those that had been hit. On Sunday, The Register confirmed on a note on its site that, "early on Saturday morning some banner advertising served for The Register by third-party ad serving company Falk AG became infected with the Bofra/IFrame exploit."

The UK publication suspended all ad serving from the ad server in question after the problem was discovered. Falk eSolution AG serves ads to many popular entertainment sites, including NBC Universal, ATOM Shockwave, The Golf Channel and A&E; Networks.

Security firm LURHQ has reported two additional malicious payloads that are being deployed across compromised networks other than Bofra/MyDoom.af.

One of the pieces of malware is called Virtumonde Adware, which is a browser hijack exploit. Such a hijack essentially takes control of a compromised Web browser and shows pop-up ads and direct users to different pages and searches than those they had intended.

The other is Trojan.Agent.EC, which takes control of a user's PC through a back door. The compromised machine can then be used to upload and execute whatever code the attacker wants.

According to LURHQ, "The sites above are being rotated frequently and are not just small, unknown sites -- one of the hacked sites included a well-known Hollywood film studio's Web site."

The viruses take advantage of certain IFRAME vulnerabilities. One of the exploits used to take advantage of the IFRAME issue involves the latest variant of MyDoom, which is also called Bofra.

The IFRAME exploit that Bofra/MyDoom.af takes advantage of does not affect users with Windows XP running SP2.

However, users running XP without the latest service pack upgrade, or running a non-XP Windows OS (such as Windows 2000) are potentially at risk.

News source: InternetNews

There are 0 additional comments, Post a comment | View printable post | Open/Close All Comments


Add A new comment
Name: (Register)
Email: (optional)
Quick HTML: (help)
  Close current tag   Standard Mode
  Close all tags   Enhanced Mode
Comment:


Smilies
(help)
Parse URL's: (will automatically add [url] [/url] round the web addresses in your comment)