Security firm
Tier-3 has
warned companies to review IT security arrangements following a potentially
serious spam incident that affected the email servers of furniture giant
Ikea.
Tier-3 said that Ikea had recently closed a serious security hole that gave
hackers and phishers full access to its email servers, allowing them to send
bulk email from the furniture giant's systems.
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Geoff Sweeney, chief technology officer at Tier-3, said that the most
troubling aspect is that the flaw allowed hackers to use Ikea as a launch pad to
send specially targeted emails containing zero-day Trojans or root-kits.
The emails could pass through almost all email and anti-spam filters as they
come from a perfectly genuine Ikea domain.
Sweeney warned that the sinister aspect of this type of attack is that it is
targeted at specific people in an organisation.
When emails appear from a trusted source, and can evade the latest antivirus
signatures, there is a chance that an organisation's entire security defence
will be beaten.
"Ikea's problems were caused because the contact template on the firm's home
page was inadequately secured, allowing hackers to insert alternative email
addresses in a contact form," said Sweeney.
"This basically allowed anyone with a little technical knowledge to generate
millions of phishing and/or spam messages from Ikea's mail servers using a
simple script."
The potential damage to the company's reputation, and the possibility of
email blacklisting, could be significant, according to the security expert.
"This is a classic case of where, with a little forward planning and
investment in IT security technology, Ikea could have avoided denting its
reputation," he said.
"It is hard to believe that Ikea reportedly did not close this security hole
immediately but left it open for a further five days after being warned about
it."
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