Tag Archives: Hacks

TechCrunch compromised, defaced

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Popular technology site TechCrunch was hit by potty-mouth hackers late on Monday, leaving the site temporarily unavailable.

A notice on TechCrunch.com’s front page on Tuesday morning explains that “TechCrunch.com was compromised by a security exploit”. Access to the site’s story archive has been suspended leaving a two para notice on the hack as the only content visible on the site.

Hackers defaced the front page of the site with a message (recorded by Mikko Hypponen of F-Secure here) apparently abusing site admins and including a link to a pornographic content and warez linking website.

This defacement was removed by site admins who are in the process of identifying the exploit involved in the hack, securing systems, and bringing TechCrunch back online.

The motives or perpetrators of the attack remain unclear but the timing – a day before Apple’s much anticipated iTab launch in San Francisco – could hardly be worse.

Source: The Register

Hundreds of Network Solutions Sites Hacked

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Web site domain registrar and hosting provider Network Solutions acknowledged Tuesday that hackers had broken into its servers and defaced hundreds of customer Web sites.

The hackers appear to have replaced each site’s home page with anti-Israeli sentiments and pictures of masked militants and armed with rocket launchers and rifles, along with the message “HaCKed by CWkomando.”

According to results for that search term entered into Microsoft’s Bing search engine, there may in fact be thousands of sites affected by this mass defacement.

One of the defaced pages belonged to Minnesota’s 8th District GOP, according to a story in The Minnesota Independent, which said the Arabic writing that accompanies the defaced pages contains the dedication “For Palestine,” and the repeated phrase “Allahu Akbar” [God is great].

Network Solutions said the hackers were able to get in by exploiting a “file-inclusion” weakness in the company’s Unix servers. So-called remote file inclusion attacks are quite common, and can let attackers insert code that gives them backdoor access to and control over the affected server. Network Solutions said it is in the process of helping customers restore their sites.

“These incidents are regrettable and we apologize for the inconvenience,” the company said in its statement. “Due to the nature of the web, the race between technology and the bad elements is a challenge that companies face continually.”

Network Solutions said there was no danger to customers’ “personally identifiable or secure information” as a result of the incident. Other recent break-ins at NetSol have not been so benign: Last summer, hackers broke into a number of Network Solutions Web servers and planted rogue code that resulted in the compromise of more than 573,000 debit and credit card accounts.

Source: Krebson Security

Google announces data breach, will stop censoring in China (if they stay at all)

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The big news today regarding Google is its announcement on its blog that it was a target of a highly focused attack on its corporate infrastructure.

Googles statement:

“First, this attack was not just on Google. As part of our investigation we have discovered that at least twenty other large companies from a wide range of businesses–including the Internet, finance, technology, media and chemical sectors–have been similarly targeted. We are currently in the process of notifying those companies, and we are also working with the relevant U.S. authorities.

Second, we have evidence to suggest that a primary goal of the attackers was accessing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists. Based on our investigation to date we believe their attack did not achieve that objective. Only two Gmail accounts appear to have been accessed, and that activity was limited to account information (such as the date the account was created) and subject line, rather than the content of emails themselves.

Third, as part of this investigation but independent of the attack on Google, we have discovered that the accounts of dozens of U.S.-, China- and Europe-based Gmail users who are advocates of human rights in China appear to have been routinely accessed by third parties. These accounts have not been accessed through any security breach at Google, but most likely via phishing scams or malware placed on the users’ computers.”

Google has announced that it will stop filtering search results in China. This is a bold move for Google, and a reversal of past practices. Google has come under fire from freedom advocates in recent years due to its cooperation with the Chinese government in censoring search results for users in China.

This move indicates that Google possibly considers the attacks to have been authorized by the Chinese government, or that they were performed by government sympathizers.

Additionally, Google has announced that if conditions in China continue to be non-conducive to business, it will consider pulling out of China completely.

Adobe confirms a targeted attack against its corporate network

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The start of 2010 has been rough for Adobe, which has now released a statement confirming a “sophisticated and coordinated attack” against its corporate network.

A statement from Adobe:

“Adobe became aware on January 2, 2010 of a computer security incident involving a sophisticated, coordinated attack against corporate network systems managed by Adobe and other companies. We are currently in contact with other companies and are investigating the incident. At this time, we have no evidence to indicate that any sensitive information — including customer, financial, employee or any other sensitive data — has been compromised. We anticipate the full investigation will take quite some time to complete. We have and will continue to use information gained from this attack to make infrastructure improvements to enhance security for Adobe, our customers and our partners.”

Adobe has come under fire recently due to a flaw found in its Reader and Acrobat software which remained unpatched for over a month. Due to this incident, Adobe has stated that it will be building a silent updater for these products.

Hacker pierces hardware firewalls with web page

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On Tuesday, hacker Samy Kamkar demonstrated a way to identify a browser’s geographical location by exploiting weaknesses in many WiFi routers. Now, he’s back with a simple method to penetrate hardware firewalls using little more than some javascript embedded in a webpage.

By luring victims to a malicious link, the attacker can access virtually any service on their machine, even when it’s behind certain routers that automatically block it to the outside world. The method has been tested on a Belkin N1 Vision Wireless router, and Kamkar says he suspects other devices are also vulnerable.

“What this means is I can penetrate their firewall/router and connect to the port that I specified, even though the firewall should never forward that port,” Kamkar told El Reg. “This defeats that security by visiting a simple web page. No authentication, XSS, user input, etc. is required.”

Kamkar’s proof-of-concept page forces the visitor to submit a hidden form on port 6667, the standard port for internet relay chat. Using a hidden value, the form surreptitiously coerces the victim to establish a DCC, or direct client-to-client, connection. Vulnerable routers will then automatically forward DCC traffic to the victim’s internal system, and using what’s known as NAT traversal an attacker can access any port that’s open on the local system.

For the hack to work, the visitor must have an application such as file transfer protocol or session initiation protocol running on his machine. The hack doesn’t guarantee an attacker will be able to compromise that service, but it does give the attacker the ability to probe it in the hope of finding a weak password or a vulnerability that will expose data or system resources.

“Most people have this false sense of security that ‘well, I’m behind my router, nobody can connect to my ports,’” said Kamkar, the hacker behind the notorious Samy Worm that in 2005 took MySpace out of commission by adding more than 1 million friends to the author’s account. “If you’re going to keep a service open to the world, you’ll probably have more upkeep” to make sure it’s secure.

The problem is a hard one to solve, since NAT, short for network address translation, is included in many routers to give users a seamless experience when accessing a host of internet-based services and applications. The use of a software-based firewall on the client will help, but Kamkar warned that even then some ports may be accessible.

While Kamkar’s proof-of-concept requires users to press a submit button, he said it’s trivial to use javascript so no interaction is required after the page is visited.

Kamkar said he based his attack on IRC because many versions of Linux used to run routers support the protocol by default. He’s based similar attacks on file transfer protocol and had success with both the Belkin and Airport Extreme routers and believes other services such SIP may work on those routers as well as other devices.

Source: The Register

Inmate gets 18 months for hacking prison computer

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A former Massachusetts prison inmate has been given an 18-month prison sentence for hacking prison computers while he was incarcerated.

Francis “Frank” Janosko, 44, was sentenced Tuesday in federal court in Boston for abusing a computer provided by the Plymouth County Correctional Facility. The computer had been set up to help inmates with their legal research.

In 2006, Janosko managed to circumvent computer controls and use the machine to send e-mail and cull data on more than 1,100 Plymouth County prison employees. He gained access to sensitive information such as their dates of birth, Social Security Numbers, telephone numbers, home addresses and employment records.

The computer he used was a so-called thin client computer that simply connected to another machine on the network and did not store any data itself, prosecutors said in Janosko’s indictment. The only program it was supposed to run was the prison’s legal research application.

However, Janosko found a way of “exploiting an idiosyncrasy in the legal research software” so he could access other programs via the terminal. He even found a way of downloading Internet video, prosecutors said.

Following his latest prison sentence, Janosko will serve three years of supervised release, during which he is prohibited from using any Internet-connected devices without the approval of his probation officer.

Whether he will face any such restrictions in prison is unclear. The U.S. Department of Justice could not be reached for comment late Tuesday.

Janosko pleaded guilty to one count of damaging a protected computer on Sept. 15.

Source: ComputerWorld

Twitter hack a result of phishing?

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According to Computer World, the attack against Twitter that redirected all traffic to a defaced site was due to DNS changes using an authorized account. Dyn Inc., the company that manages Twitter’s DNS, states that the changes were made using an authorized user, and that none of their servers were compromised, raising the possibility that the credentials were phished from a Twitter employee.

Not Just Drones: Militants Can Snoop on Most U.S. Warplanes

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Tapping into drones’ video feeds was just the start. The U.S. military’s primary system for bringing overhead surveillance down to soldiers and Marines on the ground is also vulnerable to electronic interception, say multiple military sources. That means militants have the ability to see through the eyes of all kinds of combat aircraft — from traditional fighters and bombers to unmanned spy planes. The problem is in the process of being addressed. But for now, an enormous security breach is even larger than previously thought.

The military initially developed the Remotely Operated Video Enhanced Receiver, or ROVER, in 2002. The idea was let troops on the ground download footage from Predator drones and AC-130 gunships as it was being taken. Since then, nearly every airplane in the American fleet — from F-16 and F/A-18 fighters to A-10 attack planes to Harrier jump jets to B-1B bombers has been outfitted with equipment that lets them transmit to ROVERs. Thousands of ROVER terminals have been distributed to troops in Afghanistan and Iraq.

But those early units were “fielded so fast that it was done with an unencrypted signal. It could be both intercepted (e.g. hacked into) and jammed,” e-mails an Air Force officer with knowledge of the program. In a presentation last month before a conference of the Army Aviation Association of America, a military official noted that the current ROVER terminal “receives only unencrypted L, C, S, Ku [satellite] bands.”

So the same security breach that allowed insurgent to use satellite dishes and $26 software to intercept drone feeds can be used the tap into the video transmissions of any plane.

The military is working to plug the hole — introducing new ROVER models that communicate without spilling its secrets. “Recognizing the potential for future exploitation the Air Force has been working aggressively to encrypt these ROVER downlink signals. It is my understanding that we have already developed the technical encryption solutions and are fielding them,” the Air Force officer notes.

Source: Wired

N.Korea ‘Hacks into S.Korea-U.S. Defense Plans’

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Suspected North Korean hackers may have gained access to a war plan devised by South Korea and the U.S. in preparation for an emergency, including details of specific operational scenarios, intelligence agencies believe.

According to the January issue of the Monthly Chosun published Friday, the National Intelligence Service and the Defense Security Command in mid-November discovered that an officer with the Korea-U.S. Combined Forces Command had used an unsecured USB memory stick and in that process some contents of the plan, dubbed OPLAN 5027, contained in his PC was accessed by a hacker with a Chinese IP address.

The DSC carried out sweeping security checks after the Monthly Chosun reported in November that the military Internet network had been breached by a North Korean hacking unit, and that in the process the agency confirmed that OPLAN 5027 had been hacked.

The monthly in November reported that North Korean hackers stole information from the Chemical Accidents Response Information System built by the National Institute of Environmental Research under the Ministry of Environment after infiltrating the Third Army headquarters’ computer network and using a password to access CARIS’s Center for Chemical Safety Management.

Source: The Chosun Ilbo

Aintitcool.com hacked to spread malicious PDFs

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Hackers on Thursday exploited a vulnerability on Ain’t It Cool News that redirected anyone visiting the movie review site to a server containing a malicious Adobe Reader file.

The attack targeted a vulnerable PHP script on one of AICN’s servers that automatically appended the malicious link to banner ads served on the site, its publisher, Roland De Noie, said. As a result, anyone visiting the site over a 90-minute period on Thursday morning was silently redirected to speedconnection .cn which served a malicious file named annonce.pdf.

The booby-trapped PDF, according an analysis by researchers at Praetorian Prefect, exploited two vulnerabilities in Adobe Reader that the company has already fixed. When the file is opened by unpatched versions of Reader, it launches malicious shell code that hijacks the machine. Only 12 of the 41 major anti-virus programs currently detect the trojan, according to this VirusTotal analysis.

In September, Mozilla found that more than half of Firefox users used insecure versions of Adobe Flash. It wouldn’t be surprising to find a similarly large proportion of the population using out-of-date versions of Reader, too.

Source: The Register