Major Internet Attack Under Way

moghrabi

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May 25, 2004
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Major Internet Attack Under Way

Security experts say Russian hackers are using a sophisticated attack to compromise major E-commerce Web sites, which then infect visitors with hacker tools designed to steal passwords and financial data, and possibly spew spam.


By George V. Hulme, InformationWeek
June 25, 2004
URL: http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=22102052



Internet security organizations are warning that dozens of major Internet sites, and potentially thousands of Web sites across the Internet, are currently under attack.

Several Web administrators from major companies said their Windows-based Web servers were compromised despite being up to date on security patches, security analysts reported.

"We've been watching activity since last Sunday, but it's now hit a critical mass," says Marcus Sachs, director of the SANS Internet Storm Center, who is in communications with Homeland Security's National Cyber Security division about the attack.

The attack appears to be one of the most sophisticated Internet attacks to date. The attackers are compromising and infecting E-commerce and corporate Web sites with malicious code. That code is used to infect Web surfers' using certain versions of Internet Explorer.

Security experts say Web surfers visiting these sites are at risk of having their machines infected with Trojan horse applications, used to hijack computers, as well as keystroke loggers, which are capable of stealing personal information such as financial account numbers and passwords.

It's not clear if the latest Internet Explorer patches are able to protect users' systems from becoming infected. Internet security firm Symantec's DeepSight Threat Alert says IE users are being infected through a known, but still unpatched, Internet Explorer flaw.

Syamantec's BugTraq ID for the flaws are 10472 and 10473. More information about these flaws are available at http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/10472 and http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/10473 .

Security experts have been studying the attack and are unclear about the motive behind it. Some say the attacks can be traced to a Russian Web IP address of known spammers; others say the attack is designed to steal consumers' financial information.

Daniel J. Frasnelli, manager of the technical assistance center for managed security services provider NetSec, says it started monitoring the attack activity early Thursday and immediately notified its security customers.

NetSec wouldn't disclose the names of the E-commerce sites under attack, citing legal fears, but Frasnelli said infected sites include a major auction site, an auto-pricing site, and search-engine sites. "We all know these sites," he says.

Security researchers say it's not yet clear how the attackers have compromised these Web sites. "It'll take some considerable forensic examinations," says Alfred Huger, senior director of engineering for Internet security firm Symantec.

It appears that the attackers are compromising Web servers running Microsoft's Internet Information Services, either because they aren't patched or through a newfound software vulnerability.

Web surfers who visit infected sites are infected via gif images or other Web-site objects that have malicious code attached to them, including keystroke loggers and Trojan horse applications.

"Our big concern is that there is a zero-day vulnerability in IIS," Sachs says.

Microsoft is investigating the attacks. The software vendor issued a statement saying that "at 4:00 pm PT [Thursday], Microsoft began investigating reports that some customers running unprotected versions of IIS 5.0, a component of Windows 2000 Server, were being targeted."

Microsoft and Symantec say these sites are being hit with a malicious application known as Download_Ject.

At 3 a.m. Friday, Microsoft issued a statement saying that "early indications suggest" that unpatched IIS 5.0 Servers are the systems targeted in the attack. Microsoft said the servers have not been updated with the patch included in Microsoft security bulletin April MS04-011. "Customers should ensure they have installed MS04-011 to help secure against the issues corrected by that security update," the company said.

Microsoft is also urging its customers to download and install the IE patch included with Microsoft Security Bulletin MS04-013 and that they "utilize high security settings" in Internet Explorer.

To help defend against the attack, Microsoft is urging consumers to read http://www.microsoft.com/security/incident/settings.asp. It's also asking its business customers to read http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;833633 to "minimize risk." Microsoft corporate customers that have deployed XP SP2 RC2 are not at risk to the attack, the company said.

Most major antivirus companies plan to update their antivirus software to spot systems infected with the back doors and keystroke loggers associated with this attack.