Blogger System Sites Used for Phishing 33
jimbojw writes "In a recent security advisory Fortinet is reporting that due to Blogger's popularity, hackers have started to embed malicious scripts on some blogs. 'These scripts have shown up on hundreds of Blogger.com sites. In some cases, a variant of the Stration mass mailer is responsible for directing traffic to the Blogger.com sites.' CNET reports on the situation, quoting an unnamed Google representative as saying 'These are not legitimate blogs that were compromised. They appear to be deliberately set up to promote phishing, which is against our terms of service. We are investigating, and blogs found to include malicious code or promote phishing will be deleted.' The blogs in question use meta or JavaScript redirection to push traffic to a phishing or malware site. Links to the blogs are subsequently mass-mailed by infected visitors — typically via worms in the Stration family. We can only hope that this will not cause Google to remove Blogger.com's templating engine — which is both a source of its strength, and a potential liability as illustrated by these recent attacks."
Good old javascript (Score:2, Interesting)
No, that's not a troll. Just an observation that many want to cover up.
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The blogs in question use meta or JavaScript redirection to push traffic to a phishing or malware site
I did not RTFA.
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Where is the security flaw in location.href? There is none.
Phishing with Worms? (Score:5, Funny)
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SPAM (Score:2, Interesting)
What's Next? (Score:3, Funny)
They did what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Anybody home, McFly?
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Honestly all they need to do is make the template engine scrub any script that does redirects or nasty tricks like opening popups on load.
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That's not as easy as you think it is. If the javascript is sufficiently obfuscated then it will require a fairly complete environment to detect such tricks.
I personally think it makes more sense to just not allow people to use the template engine until they've had a functioning blog with actual readers for at least a month, maybe longer.
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Yeah. It wouldn't be Web 2.0 without onMouseOver, would it.
Still, I guess it's better than embedding fifty Flash widgets on the page just for navigation.
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As to point 2, won't people just come up with new nasty tricks if some are blocked? Blacklisting won't work here.
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If you find a way to do that, you will also have solved the halting-problem, in other words, that is nearly impossible to do.
There is only one way which might be safe, supply finished javascript functions to the users to use and make it impossible to define new functions. Even that might be dangerous.
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I mean, why pay for hosting with this kind of flexibility?
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Interestingly, both Blogger and Googlepages are now Google services. Blogger is obviously meant for blogging and Googlepages for setting up common web pages, but Googlepages is a headache and Blogger offers the ability to edit the source. So if I need to set up a random web page on the web and I want it to look like I want it to look (and not have ads plastered all over
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But I agree -- I find the blogger interface more functional, in general. I suppose it also depends on what you're trying to accomplish too, however... there's certainly a place for googlepages.
That's a STRENGTH? (Score:3, Interesting)
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They often redirect to sites that pay for click traffic.
My best guess is that there are about 50.000 blog spot blogs doing this, although Google, after months, seems more serious at cleaning this shit up.
If this hasn't already been named... (Score:5, Funny)
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Been there. (Score:2, Informative)
OMG! (Score:1, Funny)
Visit http://www.whorapedia.com/ [whorapedia.com]
new hobby.. (Score:1)