Web site owners are being advised to lock down their web servers after
anti-malware vendor Sophos reported a huge
increase in the number of infected web pages from legitimate sites on the
internet.
In its biannual Security Threat Report, the vendor found 49,629 new pieces of
malware, 24 percent more than during the second half of 2006, and said it had
blocked nearly 30,000 web pages daily during the month of June alone.
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Of those infected web pages, the vast majority – around 80 percent – were
legitimate sites injected with malicious code exploiting vulnerabilities in the
web server, according to Sophos senior technology consultant, Graham Cluley.
Simply visiting one of these pages is enough to infect a user's PC with Trojans,
spyware, adware or other unwanted applications, he added.
"Hackers are trying to infect firms via the web browser because most
companies are scanning emails for viruses now," explained Cluley. "It's no good
for firms to block access based on category [or URL], they need to scan every
site for malware as the user accesses it."
The report also found that Apache servers were the most likely to be
compromised. Over half of the web-based vulnerabilities were discovered on sites
running Apache, compared to 34 percent running Microsoft IIS 6. Cluley advised
firms to ensure their servers are up-to-date with patches and to conduct regular
scans of content on the site, especially if it allows a lot of user-generated
content to be uploaded.
"We contact some of the more well-known sites we find that are infected, but
some of them just get immediately re-infected and some don't know what we're
talking about," Cluely said. "We think it could be in the public's interest to
name the ones who aren't listening to us."
Graham Titterington of analyst firm Ovum
argued that naming and shaming those sites which fail to take down known
malware from their sites could work for a few high-profile web sites, as it may
act as a warning to others. But he added that public apathy would mean a
long-term campaign may have limited effect.
Titterington also argued that complacency with patch management may be the
cause of the high number of Apache servers found to have been compromised. "
They must lock down their sites as much as they can and monitor changes in the
configuration files," he advised.
The Sophos report also found that hackers are trying to spread malware via
removable USB devices, taking advantage of PCs which have auto-run enabled to
automatically execute the code as soon as a removable device is attached.
"It's a boomerang back to the old days when PCs were infected by floppy
disks," said Cluley.
Titterington added that it reinforces the need for protection at the endpoint
as well as the gateway, as traditional web filtering technology would not be
able to spot infection via USB.
"The volume and the speed at which USBs execute and run when plugged in make
it quite potent, but it's still a relatively cumbersome channel [of infection],
" Titterington argued. "It will only really work for targeted attacks, not mass
mailers."
In related news, email security specialist
Tumbleweed has reported that spammers
are now expoliting Excel applications as a way of bypassing traditional
filtering technology. The new trend follows a similar technique of using
attached PDF documents containing embedded images, which was flagged up by
several security vendors in recent weeks.
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