New Phishing Flaw in Internet Explorer
JimmyM writes "Secunia reports on a new vulnerability in Internet Explorer. From the piece: 'This can be exploited to spoof the address bar in a browser window showing web content from a malicious web site.' According to several (german) media outlets this is already being exploited by phishing sites. Secunia has a test you can try to see if you are vulnerable."
I know IE is supposed to still be the most popular web browser there is, but my site shows firefox is in much higher use (roughly 96%). But I guess that since over 97% of hits to my site have been from slashdot that isn't so unusual, I was suprised to see that 98% of visitors used windows.
Why are people still using IE, even the most uneducated users must have heard of alternative browsers by now. I am not specifically advocating any particular browser, I use firefox, but I have heard great reports about opera. Geez these days I would use lynx over IE (and quite often do). We hear about new vulnerabilities in IE all the time IE users get a clue.
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As I understand it, there is a timing component to the flaw and I could imagine you not being vulnerable if the SWF file is too small or you have an extremely fast Internet connection.
The concept is simple. See the button bar (tab bar on Firefox) up top? Now look down -- see the Status bar down below? In between there is the screen real estate that content should be allowed to touch. Under no circumstances should anything outside of that area be touchable by the browser or any task/thread/job spawned by the browser. Period. The URL bar, button bar, toolbar, and statusbar should be inviolate. Javascript (or ANY script) should be unable to display text in the status bar, thus making it impossible to lie about link location.
Extensions, which are installed explicitly thru a separate procedure, would be the only way to put something in the status bar.
Change the little lock symbol to take up more room in the status bar. Make it list the URL the certificate is issued to next to the lock. If that doesn't match the URL you're on, change the URL bar background to ORANGE (not yellow) and make the lock flash or something. Yes, I know, you clicked "accept this certificate" but it is still a hacked-up cert and needs some cursory attention.
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For those twits that are going to whine "but I don't use the status bar" or "I've rearranged my button/menu/tool bar up top so it isn't that way" this is a trivial issue to work around. This was just a quick way to describe the working screen area for most people.
Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
I stand corrected - I just did the same as you and found the vulnerability is present.
FC Closer
hehehe, awesome. The sad part is that phishers do all this elaborate bullshit to fake their requests, when I guarantee a plain text email asking nicely for info would net them just as many results.
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People don't think that way. Yes, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, but most people put off fixing things like that. Just like "One of these days I'll paint the kitchen", or the inevitable promise to eventually "clean out the garage", people might eventually plan on "figuring out that darn computer thing better", but as everyone knows, first there's the game on, then they have gardening to do, or walking the dog, or anything other than doing that, always promising to do it next week. Sort of like me and this paper due in an hour...