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Worm Exploit Distributed by Advertising Network

Zocalo writes "Given that a lot of Slashdot readers also check The Register, it's important to note that their Internet advertising provider, Falk AG, was compromised by the BOFRA exploit yesterday. The Falk AG service has been suspended by The Register and a statement from Falk AG is due on Monday. The upshot is that if you visited the Register yesterday morning and use IE as your browser, then you probably need to run a full virus scan with up to date data files. Of course, those of us running other browsers and something like AdBlock have nothing to worry about. Again." You're OK for now if you're running SP2. There's also a good security writeup about the problem.

26 of 478 comments (clear)

  1. Hosts File by pollock · · Score: 5, Informative
    Yet another reason why it makes sense to use a hosts file with lines like:
    127.0.0.1 as1.falkag.de
    127.0.0.1 as2.falkag.de
    127.0.0.1 as3.falkag.de
    127.0.0.1 as4.falkag.de
    ....
    Check out http://someonewhocares.org/hosts for more.
    1. Re:Hosts File by jon787 · · Score: 3, Informative

      pffft

      One more reason to run your own DNS server:
      zone "falkag.net" { type master; file "/etc/bind/db.empty"; };

      --
      X(7): A program for managing terminal windows. See also screen(1).
    2. Re:Hosts File by Izago909 · · Score: 5, Informative

      127.0.0.1 is NOT the right address to use. Some scripts will delay loading or displaying a page until certian data has been downloaded. If your computer is waiting for itself to respond to itself, some pages will never be displayed... even after the browser times out. You should use 0.0.0.0 instead.

    3. Re:Hosts File by Azh+Nazg · · Score: 2, Informative
      sed s/127.0.0.1/0.0.0.0/g

      Use that, so that instead of it routing to localhost (and thereby taking a bit longer), it routes to /dev/null *wink* *wink*
      --
      Azh nazg durbataluk, azh nazg gimbatul, Azh nazg thrakataluk agh burzum ishi krimpatul! This sig blocked by Slashdot.
    4. Re:Hosts File by Splab · · Score: 2, Informative

      Just use addblock in firefox - Got most adds out there blocked via that. it makes life sooo much easier.

  2. Re:Wow by KonijnenBunny · · Score: 5, Informative

    Dutch news-site (with a fairly large, non-techie audience) nu.nl was affected as well, a large warning was put up Saturday.
    The warning (sorry, dutch only) mentioned that until Sunday afternoon, they received 1300 requests for help from possibly-affected visitors.

    As far as accountability goes, it was nice to see the publisher, Ilse Media, put up a clear FAQ and even a special-purpose contact-form to accomodate for their not-web-savvy users.
    They also mentioned further statements from Falk AG were forthcoming Monday 22nd.

    Using an alternative browser, with AdBlock installed, I wasn't affected myself...

  3. RSS Readers too by simetra · · Score: 4, Informative
    Also... if you use an RSS reader on Windows, chances are good that it uses Internet Exploder for it's web previewing. So, take that into account too.

    --

    "Would it kill you to put down the toilet seat?" -- Maya Angelou
    1. Re:RSS Readers too by Rangataua · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yesterday I was wondering why McAfee VirusScan kept complaining why Sharpreader was attempting to download a Trojan when I attempted to read some articles on The Register. Now I know.

  4. 0.0.0.0 Hosts File by pollock · · Score: 5, Informative

    In that case, feel free to use this version that uses "0.0.0.0" instead.

  5. Not just "The Register" by prandal · · Score: 4, Informative

    The ISC has more details here and here.

  6. Re:LOL by prandal · · Score: 5, Informative

    The latest version for many users is IE 6 SP1, which is vulnerable. Not everybody has XP, and even a lot of XP users still don't have SP2 (you try downloading it over a dialup line sometime).

  7. Re:AdBlock is unethical by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 2, Informative

    To add to that, I think that slashdot offers a free light version of the site for avantgo and other situations. I'm too lazy to check.

  8. Pity the write up is incorrect. by MattInFinland · · Score: 5, Informative

    The write up for the attack is incorrect. The correct sequence of events is at http://www.finlandforum.org/bb/viewtopic.php?t=768 5. I know because I noticed it at The Register first and contacted Falk AG. Thanks for the aknowledgement too Slashdot, NOT.

    1. Re:Pity the write up is incorrect. by MattInFinland · · Score: 2, Informative

      Weird the URL got screwed. Don't forget the 5 at the end. http://www.finlandforum.org/bb/viewtopic.php?t=768 5

  9. Re:AdBlock is unethical by oexeo · · Score: 2, Informative
    [...] you are stealing bandwidth and content without also viewing the means for which the web site creates enough revenue for the web site to sustain itself

    What about the bandwidth they steal from me, when the serve ads I don't want?

  10. Re:Wow by Bob+Ince · · Score: 4, Informative

    > how are we to know which one of those ad providers are infected and which are not?

    As a rule of thumb: they all are.

    Seriously. Most of the major ad networks have distributed ActiveX drive-by-downloads and *many* have distributed exploits. Almost everyone in the online ad market has dirty hands.

    Falk are known to have served exploits for some time, but I guess this is the first time they've hit the Reg.

    The exploits are going absolutely crazy right now - they're *everywhere*. See also this incident:

    http://www.dslreports.com/forum/remark,11904374~mo de=flat

    It used to be that IE users could just avoid browsing untrusted sites to stay safe. Not any more. Anyone browsing with IE pre-SP2 and no extra precautions is going to get hit sooner or later, and most likely it'll be with enough chain-loading parasites to render the machine barely usable.

    (SP2 of course is not safe either, having publically known exploits; but they don't seem to be targeted by the large exploit nets... yet.)

  11. A few things. by flamechocobo · · Score: 3, Informative

    For one, to those people commenting about how some people say that they don't want to use SP2... It isn't their fault that they don't want to. When I installed SP2 on my computer, that was using a legal copy of Windows XP, my computer BSODed and the boot sector was screwed over. This was a mistake on the count of Microsoft that deleted a number of documents that I thought were in a stable, safe place. I now make a backup of all my data to an external hard drive every other day to make sure this doesn't happen. Another comment I would like to make is for the people that are saying that ads are the only sources of revenue that websites have and we should be forced to read them and not block them. Yes, I agree that some websites need ads for money to run the site, but some ads are downright obnoxious. There are, however, sites that live off of things such as Google text only ads. www.neowin.net is an example, where you see at the top of the page only a simple text ad, or once in a while a picture ad. They are a fairly large website, and yet they support themselves by only a text ad. Interesting, isn't it? People rave about how websites absolutely have to have tons of ads to live, and yet Neowin has been living for a good 5 years now on text ads...

  12. Re:Wow by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 4, Informative

    Oh, and the same blocking could be done with a Windows web-proxy server.

    True, but the Linux proxy is obviously uninfectable by anything that could infect the end-user systems being protected. This isn't as obvious with a Windows proxy- you need to know a little more about how the proxy works, how it does its filtering, what vulnerabilities it has, etc. The person making purchasing decisions may not be comfortable with his ability to judge the vulnerability of a Windows proxy. You also need to do a more thorough lockdown because of all the damn features crammed into Windows' every orifice. And keep in mind it can be infected from the inside as well.

    In general the best networking strategies involve as diverse a set of operating systems as possible, so that no one agent can infect them all. I would go for a BSD proxy. Since it's always "dying", it offers bulletproof security.

    You don't need Linux, unless you aren't smart enough to figure out how to work Windows.

    clap clap clap... Post of the week!

    Someone with automatic update wouldn't even need to know what SP2 is, but they would be up to date.

    And that person would have more balls than I do for leaving that thing on automatic. Every SP2 install I have done so far has turned into a nerve-wracking experience.

  13. Re:AdBlock is unethical by ccharles · · Score: 2, Informative

    Not sure how this would affect protection from malware, but as for "stealing"...

    From AdBlock's FAQ:

    Q: But I want to support my favorite site! Can I set Adblock to download, and then hide stuff?
    A: Yes, see next question.

    Q: What's the difference between "hide" and "remove"?
    A: "Hide" preserves a page's layout -- content being downloaded, but not visibly rendered.

    "Remove" collapses the layout -- no content is downloaded.

  14. Re:Wow by mrseth · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is FUD. Linux and OS-X have much better segregation between user space and the OS. If what you say is true, then why are there so many exploits for IIS and not Apache? Even the ones that do exist for Apache do not buy you much, because Apache typically runs as its own user. Most exploits I've seen for IIS buy you SYSTEM access. Not only that, but the user base for Linux and OS-X are far less monolithic in terms of what folks use to read mail, browse the web, etc., and the typical applications seem to have far fewer security issues. E.g., compare the secuity track record for Mozilla versus MSIE.

  15. Re:Buffer overlow protections? by crisco · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes, aside from the AMD64 NX bit, they've added some overflow detection. According to this article they do it by placing a cookie after the end of buffers and then checking this cookie for changes. They call it 'software-enforced DEP(Data Execution Prevention)' and more information can be found at http://support.microsoft.com/kb/875352 and codeguru has the best description I've found. If you have XP with SP2 you can go to Control Panel, System, Advanced, Performance Settings button and choose the Data Execution Prevention tab to play with settings.

    --

    Bleh!

  16. Re:LOL by Thaidog · · Score: 2, Informative

    I work for IBM ebusiness webhosting so I'm well aware of what the issues are with current browsers since I paid to... and when people like you start talking out their ass. You can't even give a url? You get the big "yeah dude" of the day... congrats.

    --

    ||| I still can't believe Parkay's not butter.

  17. Re:Buffer overlow protections? by btg · · Score: 4, Informative

    This particular problem is a heap overrun, not a stack overflow. XPSP2 introduced major changes to the way heap memory is laid out.

    The improvements included safe unlinking, randomising the base address of the PEB (makes it harder to overwrite the UEF for example), and a heap version of a stack canary called a security cookie.

    There are also improvements to the stack security by using a stack canary a la StackGuard compiled in by default for all MS apps.

    Basically SP2 does contain a bunch of actual, measurable improvements to the way writeable memory is dealt with. It's not bulletproof but it will screw most 'stock' exploits.

    By the way, something that nobody will tell you about BOFRA is that there _is_ a workaround - you can disable active scripting. The exploit uses javascript to allocate masses of heap memory to 'seed' the heap ready for the exploit. This is NOT a fix for all possible ways to attack this bug, just a fix for this particular attack.

  18. Re:Wow by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Try adding a nice big hosts file to block all the ad servers. You get far less pop-ups/banners/sidebars, save bandwidth, and get less flashing shit on your screen. Here's a link to one with 10000 entries, but there are others out there too.

    --
    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
  19. The Chewbacca Defense by Zed+Too · · Score: 2, Informative

    A swift Google led me to this site.