IE Zero-Day Exploit Used In Attack Targeting Military Intelligence
wiredmikey writes "Security researchers from FireEye have discovered a new IE 10 Zero-Day exploit (CVE-2014-0322) being used in a watering hole attack on the US Veterans of Foreign Wars' website. According to FireEye, attackers compromised the VFW website and added an iframe to the site's HTML code that loads the attacker's page in the background. When the malicious code is loaded in the browser, it runs a Flash object that orchestrates the remainder of the exploit. Dubbed 'Operation SnowMan' by FireEye, the attack targets IE 10 with Adobe Flash. According to a recently-released report from CrowdStrike Strategic Web Compromises (SWC), where attackers infect strategic Websites as part of a watering hole attack to target a specific group of users, were a favorite attack method for groups operating out of Russia and China. FireEye believes the attackers behind the campaign, thought to be operating out of China, are associated with two previously identified campaigns: Operation DeputyDog and Operation Ephemeral Hydra. 'A possible objective in the SnowMan attack is targeting military service members to steal military intelligence,' FireEye said."
And without anykind of Flash blocker? God they're even more stupid than I originally theorized.
Every time I think Microsoft has their browser house in order, and it might be safe to use IE occasionally, stuff like this hits the fan.
Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
If military intelligence are using IE 10 with Flash enabled, they really need to drop the last half of their name.
Not that new.
Its been around since 2009 at least. The term is best explained by the above article.
However the RSA has started slinging this name about in 2012.
The hallmark is simply planting your malware where your targets often go.
Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
Biggest oxymoron since Microsoft works.
Dude, the VFW is substantially a drinking club for old warhorses.
TFA is akin to saying the Commies infiltrated DFW to score information on the U.S. Air Force.
YHBT. HAND.
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
This is the VFW
Robert H. Jordan VFW Post 7125
and this is the VFW: Where the V.F.W. Is Both Tough and Feminine
How's that an IE vulnerability if it uses Flash as a vector? Are they adding the iFrame in a non-standard way that only IE is susceptible to?
"They continue to under-promise and over-deliver. And that continues to be their sort of mantra."
FireEye expects a loss of 51-56 cents per share for the quarter.
Cybersecurity firm FireEye sees weak revenue, warns on costs Feb 11
95% of all networks are compromised. Is yours secure?
They use IE and then wonder why we say "Military Intelligence" is an oxymoron?
Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
'US Veterans of Foreign Wars'
Are there any others alive?
15 years since Microsoft announced they were going to take Security seriously in Windows? And there's been like what 10 major versions if Internet Explorer? (6 of which were since this big decision) And we're still seeing zero-day exploits coming out?
I think someone pointed this out already but let me emphasize--hacking the VFW for getting "military intelligence" suggests that the hackers know approximately zero about what the VFW is. First of all, a huge percentage of anyone with access to worthwhile military intelligence is not in the military at all. Second, the VFW--rtf initials--Veterans of Foreign Wars--and since very few Iraq or Afghanistan veterans ever joined, the average age is about 90. My first thought at reading this was that the hackers are from some very foreign country using MS Word for translation from English.
Secure OpenSource
slashdot troll = you make a compelling argument I do not like the implications of.
Not necessarily. A lot of our membership is still in the Reserves or National Guard. If they can get inside the military network, they can have a little bit of fun. When I was in, all of the truly classified stuff was on an internal network that was actually physically separated from the Real World. I can't swear that this is still the case, but I'd be greatly surprised if it wasn't.
Karma: Chameleon - mostly influenced by bad '80s New Wave music
Nothing of value was lost or impaired.
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."