Hacked Bank of India Site Labeled Trustworthy 54
SkiifGeek writes "When the team at Sunbelt Software picked up on a sneaky hack present on the Bank of India website, it became a unique opportunity to see how anti-phishing and website trust verification tools were handling a legitimate site that had been attacked. Unfortunately, not one of the sites or tools identified that the Bank of India website was compromised and serving malware to all visitors The refresh time on a trust-brokering site is too long to be useful when a surf-by attack on a trusted site can take place in a matter of seconds, with a lifetime of hours, and with a victim base of thousands or greater."
Re:Whoopdeedoo (Score:5, Insightful)
For some unknown reason, I hoped that financial institutions would have more online security than Doubleclick or Akamai.
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Having worked for a bank, I'd be floored if financial systems' defenses ever caught up with technical systems'. The problem is that in a financial organization financial skills are valued on a cultural level rather than technical skills. This is quite different from a technical company, at least one in its early to mid life. (in, of course, my experience and
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Most banks pay attention to their IT infrastructure, and if a compromise happened, heads would roll. However, almost always, there would be some way of showing due diligence [1] so nobody goes to prison or major lawsuits don't get filed. On the other hand Akamai's whole line of
Banks are notoriously technically ignorant. (Score:2)
The other bank seemed to have very, very little interest in technical issues, also.
We have accounts with several online banks, including an
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Akamai is a tech company. They know their networks extremely well. I would expect that they were more competent with regards to security threats to their servers than a financial institution, whose main business is not running a computer network...
How common a problem? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:How common a problem? (Score:4, Insightful)
Especially amusing is the comment some moron has posted complaining about when Bank of India was getting a red rating. Basically he is saying how he used the site for three years and it must be a site advisor problem not a problem with the Bank of India website.
How on earth do you come up with a technological solution that copes with people who even when they get a warning saying that the site they about to visit is dangerous carry on and visit the site anyway. I know that he should now have learnt his lesson (assuming he visited the site and got all that crap installed on his PC) but there must be alot more morons out there just like him.
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Posted at 12/23/2006-02:16:06 PM by Mehli B Mulla, Reviewer , View profile [ Reputation score: 1 / 9 ]
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Banks: Please Stop Using ActiveX ! (Score:5, Insightful)
One of those is when I've actually got to visit one of my online banking sites, which requires some obscure activex "security" extension to work. For someone who uses FF, noscript and occasional peeks at firebug, it really pisses me off when I have to disable all my own security checks to enable a site to "secure" itself.
This is just another instance where I'd have been hit if I had been a user of the said bank (and had to use IE to browse it).
Re:Banks: Please Stop Using ActiveX ! (Score:5, Interesting)
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So not only those institutes may be Windows-only, but they're behind the time and pretty bad too. At least from what I read, not -all- of em are like that...
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Good.
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You're just happy that the use of ActiveX isn't dogma of major Indian religions?
You're glad you won't have to compete in the job market against outsourcing to Indian Linux/BSD gurus?
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Re:Banks: Please Stop Using ActiveX ! (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't forget Privoxy.
But yeah, the only thing I deliberately use Internet Exploiter for is Windowsupdate. Requiring an ActiveX control (ActiveX!) on a financial site is unacceptable, as is forcing visitors to use Explorer. Personally, I have the same setup you do, and the occasional site that requires Explorer doesn't get visited again. I also have several sites that I use for financial purposes, and they all support Firefox. If they didn't, I'd either switch institutions, or not use their site.
One of those is when I've actually got to visit one of my online banking sites, which requires some obscure activex "security" extension to work.
That's insane. I mean, the bank is assuming that their own security is perfect and will never be cracked, which is not realistic. When you get right down to it, you'd think that banks (of all organizations) would require the use of a more secure medium. Nothing would please me more than to navigate to my bank's Web site in Explorer and see a message "We're sorry, but due to ongoing security issues with Microsoft Internet Explorer, this site requires the use of a more capable browser" and see links to Firefox, Opera and others. When I first signed up at my current bank, it was the exact opposite, but fortunately I could just change the browser ID and it worked fine, no ActiveX crap.
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I can personally vouch that the following financial institutions support Firefox, and I did not have to chew anyone's ears or fiddle with agent strings. Vanguard, Schwab, Dollar Bank, Citizens Bank, Smith Barney, Fidelity, MFS, Ameritrade, NDB (might be defunct now). And if an Financial institution does not support FireFox, it does not get my busi
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iframes... (Score:2)
Re:iframes... (Score:4, Informative)
They're useful for doing in-place file uploads without refreshing the page (e.g., in a web app like Gmail where you'd want to add an attachment to a message), because that's the only way to do that.
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They are efficent; they let you change the content of part of your page without reloading the whole thing. I use them frequently with venture capital company websites to display slightly delayed stock charts and share price information for example. They can update themselves every couple minutes without reloading the whole page.
Additionally, because the chart and share info
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in Soviet India... (Score:1, Funny)
Anti-phishing tools shouldn't be used to determine (Score:5, Interesting)
These tools might have picked up thousands of shoddily done, fly by night phishing scams. It doesn't reflect badly on them if one well done, sophisticated cracked server can fool them. There is still going to be errors. These tools allow people to discount the most obvious hacks, and use their time on the 1% of most dangerous hacks.
Re:Anti-phishing tools shouldn't be used to determ (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Anti-phishing tools shouldn't be used to determ (Score:1)
Maybe I'm misreading this, but it looks like you're advocating "Enumerating Badness", which is No.2 in the Six Dumbest Ideas in Computer Security [ranum.com] (it's actually a special case of the No.1 dumbest idea, "Default Allow"). Or did you mean something different?
Looks to me..... (Score:1)
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now if it were me... (Score:2, Interesting)
the login page also has BIG warnings: do not click on any links (relating to your banking or purporting to be) or give your banking details to anyone on the internet or in an e-mail since the bank or it's employees will never ask for it
then when you are on your profile page, before you can do any transaction at all, the s
Re:now if it were me... (Score:4, Informative)
PayPal, eBay, and Verisign offer a rebranded Vasco keyfob that one can use. Enter in username, tab to the password field, enter in your password, then append the six digit number from the Digipass Go 3 (the OEM name), and you are in. Though this is not as well engineered as a SecurID system, it still forces a would-be thief to have physical custody of the keyfob and the password to the account.
Some European banks use a system similar to the age-old one time password system found in BSD (S/Key or OPIE). You obtain a list of one time passwords on a piece of paper that you scratch off in the mail, and every time you log in, you scratch off the next one on the list. This can be attacked (there are some targeted phishing attacks to try to get users to type in multiple lines off the OTP paper), but it keeps a compromised user PC from becoming an entry point for an attacker.
Lastly, there are always Aladdin eTokens that store a private client certificate. This is one of the more secure ways, because there are zero passwords used. The server asks the client (any web browser pretty much) for a certificate similar to how a SSL enabled web browser asks the web server for its cert, the web browser passes the signing request to the eToken, the eToken signs it on the physical card (the private key never leaves the eToken), and the server checks the validated cert against the user list and lets the user in. For academic places (universities), this is one of the absolute best ways to do things.
All and all, probably the best solution would likely be a hybrid system, similar to an eToken NG-OTP keyfob, that allows a user to plug the token in and use it online with client certificates, or offline, typing the six digit number off the LCD screen.
Disclaimer: I don't work for Aladdin, RSA, or Vasco, but like their products.
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I have to do this every single time I want to access my account online. The second password sounds like it should be resistant to the average keylogger.
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How aggressive do you want rating systems to be? (Score:2)
How aggressive should systems be about downgrading ratings for web sites? We've been struggling with this for SiteTruth. [sitetruth.com] In addition to SiteTruth's main function, checking business identity, we have some basic phishing checks. We download the PhishTank database every few hours. PhishTank has lists of bad URLs, but now that the smarter phishing sites change URL and even subdomain in each spam e-mail, blocking by URL is no longer effective. So we now flag the entire base domain.
This can have broad effe
It has been fixed, (Score:2)
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Though many Indians now own PCs, they [I mean the PCs, not the Indians ;-)] are still considered a luxury items. Further the replacement time is quite large in India. Most people use internet cafes on a regular basis to access the net. So, yeah, there are plenty of old computers running old OSes in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh etc. So a bank site would still target a 800x600 screen. And then clueless managers will waste the screen real estate with useless stuff and links.
Bank of India? (Score:1)
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That must have hurt. Having a real journalist post actual facts that contradict your product pitch article.
Shame on you guys. BTW - anyone heard of these Beskerming before?