Security researcher Dancho Danchev cited numerous examples of high profile websites hit by attackers, believed to be part of the infamous Russian Business Network.
Wal-Mart, Target, USA Today, and several university websites displayed an awful truth in search results observed by Danchev. They and many others received unwanted search optimization via the injection of iframes through code added to search queries into their sites.
The attacks started two weeka ago, and have evolved into what Danchev wryly called "what looks like a large scale web application vulnerabilities audit of high profile sites." He believes over a million search queries have been poisoned, due to insufficient security on the web applications affected by them.
When people do a site search on the affected domains, these infected sites redirect visitors via the iframes to bogus security software or variants of the notorious Zlob Trojan malware. Zlob grabs malware from other servers, and loads it onto a compromised PC.
Danchev noted in his post the IP addresses of the iframes being injected into these high profile sites resolve to locations in New York City, Berlin, and Panama. He noted Google is actively filtering search results leading to iframes on the affected servers, which makes it hard to determine going forward which sites may have been newly infected.
Blame poor input validation for the problem. The web applications being victimized are not sanitizing code being appended to search queries made on their sites, resulting in search results being poisoned. InfoWorld noted how these results sometimes get submitted by the sites back to Google, where other searchers will find the malicious pages.
Comments
thanks for your article.
thanks for its article..
thanks for its article.. very helpful.. :)
When and where will the Russian hackers strike next?
It seems to me that none of us are going to be able to get away from computer hackers who like to cause havoc and chaos among the surfers on Internet highway.
Oh well, let's all hope that they can not get into our bank account websites next! That would definately not be good. Do any of you think that they will catch these hackers? How do you think that one can one SAFE PROOF their website from people like this? What are your thoughts?
-Tonya from WheresYourBid.com
Iframe Injection Attacks
what is the solution of iframe injection attacks?
UPDATES
Keep all of your scripts updated. This eliminates most of the problem.
Paid Market Research
don't use i frames
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