Growth of the Underground Cybercrime Economy
AC50 writes "According to research from Trend Micro's TrendLabs compromised Web sites are gaining in importance on malicious sites created specifically by cyber-criminals. The research debunks the conventional wisdom about not visiting questionable sites, because even trusted Web sites such as those belonging to Fortune 500 companies, schools, and government organizations can serve forth malware."
Any site serving up adverts is potentially sering up malware. Durr.....
... use it together with adblocker and a good antivirus package and your web experience will be safe and much faster.
If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
We have a list of major sites being exploited by active phishing scams, which we update every three hours. There are 56 sites on the list right now. Most sites don't stay on the list too long, but we still have 14 that have been on the list since last year. Most of them are DSL service providers with compromised machines they haven't kicked off. Some providers are proactive about this, and some aren't. Then there are a few compromised sites that just have no clue about how to fix their problem. One such site is the teacher web space for a school district.
By, well, nagging, we've been able to get the big players to fix their problems. Google, Yahoo, MSN, and Dell were all on the list at one point, but they've all tightened up their systems.
The points we make with this list are that 1) the number of major sites involved is small, and 2) blacklisting at the second level domain level causes acceptable levels of collateral damage. So go ahead, blacklist the whole second level domain in your phishing filters. Think of it as a way to encourage sites to clean up their act. Or as a way to find out where to apply the clue stick.
This list is about "major" sites, ones in Open Directory (1.7 million sites.) The issue there is with attackers trying to steal the credibility of the major site. At the other end of the scale, any domain less than a few weeks old probably isn't worth connecting to. Or at least it should be read with all executable content disabled, including HTML email. Also, any link with more than one redirect probably shouldn't be followed.
It's easier to filter out the attackers if you're willing to filter out the bottom-feeders as well. But that's another story.
Ah yes, Active X control etc, I like the fact and it is impressive, that Windows Defender (compulsory with Vista) blocks Windows Live Toolbar! A nation devided cannot stand.... Nothing beats common sense (trademarked) though does it?
Most of the hosts are not aware their site has been "infected" half of the time. I used a site regularly until one day it tried to download some malware in an iframe and an flv file. Not aware at all their site had got a problem.
Not helped by some people who use a certain "site advisor" program giving it a green tick because it was "full of pretty, cool and amazing things" instead of looking at what their anticrapware app was singing / doing and warning people accordingly.
For that fact alone I refuse to bank online, I just feel safer. Call me old fashioned....
In the name of sticking up for someone with autism, f**k you! Prejudiced bastard.... that is unlawful and linuc for dumm
When you write: think twice before visiting a site which you're not sure of. Especially if you browse with internet exploder..
Surely you mean think twice before [...] you browse with internet exploder..
My girlfriend checks website links routinely in PDF documents as part of her work and her machine is routinely attacked my adware and malware by supposedly innocuous websites that are supposed to be related to educational institutions or professional, technical type organizations hosting white papers, and other such information. (yeah yeah, run on sentence, sue me) I'm guessing some of these sites have been compromised or intentionally corrupted by webmasters for personal gain. In my experience this stuff happens all the time.
Juice is a community site. Google Altiris SVS for better information.
You're confusing Virtual Memory with a Virtual Machine.
The OP is quite correct. It's a heck of a lot easier to clean up an attack that has compromised a VMWare image than one which has compromised the PC.