Cyber-criminals are developing a new genre of highly sophisticated and
evasive attacks designed to bypass signature-based and database-reliant security
technology, new research claims.
The latest
Web
Security Trends Report (Q2 2007) from security firm
Finjan
warns of a proliferation of "affiliation networks" based on a "hosted model"
for malicious code.
The networks use off-the-shelf malicious code packages to compromise highly
popular websites and even government domains.
Finjan's study points to the growing presence of malicious code in online
advertising on legitimate websites.
"Recent findings reveal that hackers have created a new class of highly
evasive attacks which represent a quantum leap in terms of technological
sophistication, going far beyond drive-by downloads and code obfuscation," the
report states.
"In order to minimise the malicious code's window of exposure, evasive
attacks keep track of the actual IP addresses of visitors to a particular
website or web page."
Using this information, the attackers restrict exposure to the malicious code
to a single view from each unique IP address.
This means that the second time a given IP address tries to access the
malicious page, a benign page will be automatically displayed in its place. All
traces of the initial malicious page completely disappear.
"Evasive attack techniques, where malicious code is controlled per IP
address, country of origin or number of visits, provide hackers with the ability
to minimise the malicious code's exposure, thereby reducing the likelihood of
detection," said Yuval Ben-Itzhak, chief technology officer at Finjan.
"Moreover, evasive attacks can identify the IP addresses of crawlers used by
URL filtering, reputation services and search engines, replying to these engines
with legitimate content and increasing the chances of mistakenly being
classified as a legitimate category.
"The combination of these evasive attacks with code obfuscation techniques
significantly enhances the capability of sophisticated hackers to go undetected.
"
A follow-up study conducted by Finjan's Malicious Code Research Centre warns
of the growing presence of malicious code in online advertising.
As websites depend more on ad revenues, they often display ads from
third-party advertising networks over which they may have little or no control.
While legitimate website owners trust advertisers to display non-malicious
content, advertisers sometimes "sublet" space to others.
This hierarchy can often comprise several layers, seriously compromising the
level of control the website owner has over advertising content.
The report includes an analysis of an innocent blog site that deploys
keyword-based advertisements placed automatically from an ad server.
Finjan found that the ad content also included obfuscated references to
malicious code on a third site that uses multiple infection techniques to
download a Trojan key-logger to the user's machine.
Another recent example was a banner ad hiding code with the ANI exploit that
was being hosted unknowingly on one of the most popular techie websites.
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