Malvertising Campaign Used a Free Certificate From Let's Encrypt (csoonline.com)
itwbennett writes: On Wednesday, Trend Micro wrote that it discovered a cyberattack on Dec. 21 that was designed to install banking malware on computers. The cybercriminals had compromised a legitimate website and set up a subdomain that led to a server under their control, wrote Joseph Chen, a fraud researcher with Trend. The subdomain used an SSL/TLS (Secure Sockets Layer/Transport Layer Security) certificate issued by Let's Encrypt, the first large-scale project to issue free digital certificates. which is run by the ISRG (Internet Security Research Group) and is backed by Mozilla, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Cisco, and Akamai, among others. The incident has sparked disagreement over how to deal with such abuse, writes Jeremy Kirk.
This style of attack would have been able to get an SSL cert from most cheap cert providers, as most of the cheap ones only require you to dump a particular file in the right place on the website for verification, so why the emphasis on "Lets Encrypt"? Because they are "cheaper than cheap"?
This article looks like a really good response to the issue: https://unmitigatedrisk.com/?p=552
The ad brokers do not care that bad ads slipped in as they make money on any, so they have zero incentive to remove malvertising other than a cursory effort to appease the lawyers and government.
This is why I install adblocks on all customer machines now (and we process a large amount). To an end user advertising of of limited utility, and comes with at minimum high annoyance and at worst malware/fraud/id theft.
Case in point, I was trying to find news information on a police standoff near my house, and one of the official local news stations ads were targeting nexus 6 with a scam 'free iPad' redirect. This only occurred on my Nexus 6, not a PC or LG phone. This is just normal day to day browsing, and I could not even read the news.
The state of affairs when it comes to online advertising and scams is very bad and will kill the industry very soon if changes are not made. Unfortunately it will likely bring down many good sites for real content with it.
Silence is a state of mime.
If they were able to create a subdomain, that means the attackers controlled all traffic to that subdomain.
Since most certificate authorities only verify via email to the domain for which the certificate is requested, the attackers would have gotten a certificate from virtually any CA.
There are additional verification steps required for EV certificates that should thwart this sort of attack, but singling out Let's Encrypt for issuing a certificate in this case is disingenuous.
The real problem lies with the DNS registrar that accepted an unauthorized subdomain registration request. (Or maybe the client's account was compromised, in which case the victim is to blame.)
Either way, the submission titles makes it seem this is a problem with Let's Encrypt when it most certainly is not.
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According to the latest ruleset, this post should be modded as Vorpal Flamebait +5.