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  • Antivirus company's Web site downloads ... a virus

    San Francisco - The Web site for Indian antivirus vendor AvSoft Technologies has been hacked and is being used to install malicious software on visitors' computers, security researchers said Thursday.
    The download section of AvSoft's S-cop Web site hosts the malicious code, according to Roger Thompson, chief research officer with security vendor AVG. "They let one of their pages get hit by an iFrame injection," he said. "It shows that anyone can be a victim.... It's hard to protect Web servers properly."
    The technique used on the site has been seen in thousands of similar hacks over the past few months. The attackers open an invisible iFrame Window within the victim's browser, which redirects the client to another server. That server, in turn, launches attack code that attempts to install malicious software on the victim's computer.
    The malicious software is a variant of the Virut virus family.
    The iFrame pages are commonly used by Web developers to insert content into their Web pages, but because it is possible to create an invisible iFrame window, the technology is often misused by hackers as a way to silently redirect victims to malicious Web sites.
    AvSoft, based in New Delhi, sells an antivirus product called SmartCOP and has sold a second antivirus product called Smartdog. The company, which is not well-known in the U.S., also specializes in recovering data lost due to virus attacks. The company could not be reached for comment Thursday afternoon.
    That data recovery service could come in handy for some, as Virut is known as a "parasitic infector" virus that is extremely difficult to remove. "It infects all of your programs on your local hard drives, and then it starts hitting your network drives as well the first time you run," Thompson said.
    Fortunately, the malware used to install Virut exploits only well-known bugs, meaning that users who are running antivirus software on fully patched systems will probably not be infected by the attack in its current state, security experts say.
    Nobody knows how the malware got onto the Web site in the first place. News of the hack was reported on the Full Disclosure security discussion list on Thursday.
    McAfee Security Research Manager Dave Marcus believes that the site was compromised by exploiting a Web programming error, most likely in the site's SQL or PHP code. Security experts say that criminals have written automated programs that scour the Web for these types of flaws and then automatically infect sites, making this an increasingly common problem.
    Cant stand the 32 bit and above gaming.
    Gamers for the return of 2d sprite filled games!

  • #2
    Heh, it happens.
    I may be lazy, but I can...zzzZZZzzzZZZzzzZZZ...

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    • #3
      There's rather a lot of nasty viruses showing up lately. Quite a few of them don't show up on any scans, and I'm aware of at least one that is totally invisible even if you know what to look for...

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      • #4
        Then how do you know about it?

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        • #5
          I managed to catch at least two different ones, and in the process of trying to find out what the first happened to be I found out that they're somewhat common lately. Unfortunately, the second one I still haven't been able to locate and remove.

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          • #6
            Heh, for the first time in a year that i have had Cheat Engine (downloaded from this fine site ; ) and having gone through 3 anti virus programs AVG slated that it was infected by a Trojan. This was odd seeing as i have not used it since hybrid was attempting to teach me about the finner points of address hacking.
            Cant stand the 32 bit and above gaming.
            Gamers for the return of 2d sprite filled games!

            Comment


            • #7
              LMZ: Those are likely rootkits. There's almost no way to detect, let alone remove, some of these, though many of them can be caught by detecting alternate data streams and such. A live-boot, Bart-PE OS, such as MiniXT, would be the way to go. Take a look at your startup entries in the registry from an outside source.
              I may be lazy, but I can...zzzZZZzzzZZZzzzZZZ...

              Comment

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