Google Purges Thousands of Malware Sites 133
Stony Stevenson sends in word on the most massive "SEO poisoning" seen to date. The attack was directed at Google in particular and resulted in tens of thousands of Web pages hosting exploits showing up on the first page of Google searches for thousands of common terms (PDF). Sunbelt Software blogged about the attack on Monday after investigating it for months. By Wednesday Google had removed tens of thousands of malware-hosting pages from its index.
BBC News piece (Score:5, Insightful)
The sites were targeting IE exploits.
Re:BBC News piece (Score:5, Informative)
Mr Eckelberry said tens of thousands of domains, many based in China and only a couple of days old, were used in the vanguard of the attack.
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The booby-trapped websites were thought to be in operation for about 24 hours before Google began stripping them out of its search index.
Months of Google poisoning or just day(s)?
Re:BBC News piece (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:BBC News piece (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:BBC News piece (Score:5, Informative)
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I'm tagging this article 'Windows' (Score:2)
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-Chris
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Re:BBC News piece (Score:5, Insightful)
Not everybody is interested in knowing details about every single one of his possessions. You, me and the rest of the
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doors" that came with his house after a break-in.
Exactly, if I'm going to live in an area with a Highish level of crime I'm sure as hell going to make sure that my house has high security doors and windows, the 'idiots' who didn't will obviously get broken into when I don't and yes they could have prevented it so it's partly their fault, just like the police telling you not to leave laptops in the boot o
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The idiots who use Windows affect me indirectly which is really annoying since their computers are sending me spam and brute forcing my servers.
Re:BBC News piece (Score:5, Informative)
The most common brute-force attack I see on my IPS are ssh brute-force attacks coming from *nix servers that have been compromised. From what I understand, those ssh brute force attacks are highly effective.
I am no fan of Windows either, but I think that might be a stretch to blame Windows for the bulk of brute-force attacks.
Spam, absolutely.
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Its more expensive than a normal brute force so I assume its Windows boxes.
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Maybe because the administrators of so many servers are morons. They either set stupid passwords for root, or allow their users to pick easy passwords.
Disabling plain-text auth is also a very good idea. Disabling direct root login via ssh, even better.
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Maybe because the administrators of so many servers are morons. They either set stupid passwords for root....
Disabling direct root login via ssh, even better.
I should point out that the SSH worm I've seen just sets up a spam zombie without even trying to gain root access.
or allow their users to pick easy passwords.
I got bit, because I created a temporary account I had only planned to use for about an hour or so before deleting. I used the username "temp" with the password "temp123". Then I forgot to delete the account when I was done. Two weeks later my ISP forwarded me a complaint.
So yeah, don't do that... but the worm also tries a lot of other common usernames, and if you have a lot of users, so
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Operating systems are the least of your issues.
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Does anyone remember the great "security audit" of all of Microsoft's software, when they (claimed to have) stopped all development for a month or more to address security problems. That was in 2000. Security in Windows
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Fixed it for you. The actual brand of tools/cars/housing should be irrelevant. Are you saying there is no way you could injure yourself by using "quality" tools, even by using them incorrectly? If so that is preposterous.
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Anyway, the point is: you *can* make tools safe (especially the software kind), it's just a question of cost and ingenuity.
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I think you can make tools "safer", but no matter how "safe" some idiot will find a way to misuse it and injure themsel
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There's sometimes sense in telling people: "By doing X you can decrease the chance that you'll be a victim" though.
Sounds Good To Me (Score:2)
Re:Sounds Good To Me (Score:5, Informative)
In part, I think this has to do with the oddness that is their ranking strategy. They want to find the most relevant sites for any given query. So they study online behavior and adjust their algorithm to reflect that behavior. At the same time, they publish "guidelines" on how webmasters should design their sites and link out/in. It seems like they're trying to influence how websites behave online and then say that they're picking up on the organic trends. But in the end, they generate the trends. And then they tell everyone how to do it. Because of this, the system will always be vulnerable.
Until, that is, PigeonRank(TM) [google.com] is launched.
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I tend to browse Google results with McAfee SiteAdvisor installed as a plugin. I don't particularly like McAfee, but I do like being able to see reputations of sites before I click on them. Of course, if McAfee hasn't tested the site yet, I accept the risk.
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And as for flames, you're the one throwing around baseless accusations. Get some proof, or get off.
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"We don't condone the practice
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This is actually another scary example of Google being more and more evil. Think, if the US government had the DNS servers point that domain to a "This is a known malware" site, slashdot would be up in arms. But when a private corporation removes it from their index that's a good thing?
I believe in net neutrality, and I believe in search engine neutrality as well. That is, just as AT&T should
all your base (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:all your base (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't think it would be possible. I linked to a turing test program I wrote called "art.exe" from my Artificial Insanity [mcgrew.info] page that I hosted on another site I owned (which I since have let lapse). The only way a crawler would know that this program was benign was because it isn't listed in any of the antivirus lists of viral signatures.
What would be nice is if Google would have its crawlers automatically check pages as they crawled. If there were any known malwars the page would be blacklsted. But there's no way I can think of to flag malware that hasn't been identified as such by humans.
-mcgrew
PS:)downside would be that you couldn't find microsoft.com (Foghorn Leghorn says...)
PPS: I've been mulling over rewriting the Artificial Insanity program in javascript. But I'm having a hard time finding the time.
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I'm thinking an independent body would be better deciding what is and what is not malware.
Re:all your base (Score:5, Insightful)
An independent body deciding about the malness of any ware is, if a certain responsiveness could be guaranteed, a creepy idea. Forming such a commitee would very surely be a huge leap in the direction of an often-mentioned TCPA (Palladium, NGSCB, Donkey poop)-secured blacklist society. A small aristocraty of people in this decision commitee would become the target of a trillion-dollar industry and be able to decide exactly what piece of software is ran by anybody. On the other hand, allowing anybody to participate in these votes would guarantee this operation not to be effective because of the huge delay this would cause. The same goes for adding legal ways to fight a decision by this body - having one would cause the system to become as slow as many legal systems throughout the world are today, not having one would be a surefire way to cause dissatisfaction with lots and lots of developers (both natural and legal persons).
Also, don't forget to take into account the current legal trouble e.g. encryption software is going through. I'm certain an independent body would decide similar to lawmakers throughout the world. Essentially, you could probably forget about running Linux (Open Source? That could run anything, including highly illegal tools like decss without any way to stop it), any cd/dvd copying software (It's fun to break the D-M-C-A (sung to the tune of YMCA)), nmap (Remember germany banning "Hacker tools"?) or anything else.
Sorry for painting such a dystopian future, but letting any (independent, governmental or profit-oriented) body whatsoever decide what software's good and what's bad just isn't what you, me or most anybody else wants.
Re:all your base (Score:4, Interesting)
In googles interest, they are a search engine and not a publisher and for that reason are not subject to the indexes of child porn and other illegal activity. Once google start going down the road of blocking spam and other malicious sites it could be suggested they lose the right of being an automatic aggregation engine.
All the The pirate bay does is index pointer links, all google does is index pointer links -- one of them has a safe harbour in the US and the other does not. How long before Google itself loses its 'safe harbour' ?
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Not possible; even disregarding the problem that other posters have raised, that the automatic recognition of novel malware is more or less impossible, most of the black hats setting up these sites have started to get really sophisticated and the servers can return different web pages based on IP addresses, and often never serve up exploits more than once to any given IP address.
Like everything in the security game,
They've also changed their PageRank for many sites (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, while I was digging through the Google results to find out why this could have possibly happened (prior to reading the blog post linked above) I found tons of SEO spam sites that my site had been linked from. I had never seen that many junk results returned before and was surprised they were getting through. I was seriously concerned that they had something to do w/my ranking drop.
At least Google is getting back on track dumping those bastards. While most people probably don't change their default settings to see anything more than the first 10 results, I am constantly looking through the first 100 on various searches and have seen more and more of that. I was wondering if some of the claims of Google's drop from #1 would imminent if something didn't change.
Re:They've also changed their PageRank for many si (Score:2)
At least Google is getting back on track dumping those bastards. While most people probably don't change their default settings to see anything more than the first 10 results, I am constantly looking through the first 100 on various searches and have seen more and more of that. I was wondering if some of the claims of Google's drop from #1 would imminent if something didn't change.
Well, they may be getting back at them, but...
Ironically, Google itself refused to confirm or deny that it had cleansed its index of the more than 40,000 malware hosting sites, or even that they had existed. "Google takes the security of our users very seriously, especially when it comes to malware," a company spokeswoman said today in an e-mail. "In our search results, we try to warn users of potentially dangerous sites when we know of them. Sites that clearly exploit browser security holes to install software, such as malware, spyware, viruses, adware and Trojan horses, are in violation of the Google quality guidelines and may be removed from Google's index."
What is Google afraid of? That their stock price will plunge if everyone finds out they were manipulated by malware sites?
Re:They've also changed their PageRank for many si (Score:5, Funny)
Personally, I'm comfortable with the fact that I'm only the second-best me [google.com] out there. Let that other fella have his glory, because I'm never going back to the Rob Vincent Academy. I'm not going into it here, but those bastards Rob, Rob, and Rob know why.
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Re:They've also changed their PageRank for many si (Score:1)
They also removed your
search [google.de]
CC.
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CC.
Re:They've also changed their PageRank for many si (Score:1)
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There have only been 12 Google Searches for [B|b]ill [R|r]oehl today though. Not nearly enough to stroke my ego
I for one... (Score:1, Funny)
No no no you got the meme wrong (Score:1)
Malware -- hosting pages! (Score:2)
Wierd, usually it's tha pages that are hosting malware, rather than the other way around. OW! Stop hitting me!
The keywords .. (Score:2, Interesting)
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And what's SEO? (Score:3, Informative)
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Censoring (Score:5, Funny)
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A hidden gem (Score:5, Interesting)
Thousands of terms? (Score:3, Insightful)
Second to last one (Score:1)
Google guys (Score:1)
Bad news for... (Score:2, Funny)
Little difference (Score:2, Funny)
So, how do you tell the difference between this and any normal Google results page?
Yahoo and LiveSearch, too... (Score:2, Informative)
Stalinism (Score:1, Funny)
And you won't tolerate them. You deny them their civil rights. You deny them their FREEDOM OF SPEECH!
This is outright Stalinism. It's not their fault fat, stupid, bored, lonely Americans will buy products geared toward the intelligence of a labrador. They're just trying to feed their families... to be part o
"Site Advisor" - any make it past it ? (Score:1)
My one wish for Google (Score:1, Interesting)
This would then include the sites: *.cn
which would include:
bucket.rabbitexothermicsoup.cn
flight.othersittingport.cn
aggressive.xeroxmaneshop.cn
Also the top 40 search result domains for 'geforce 8800gt review' or any other product, the content of which is typically:
Reviews for Geforce 8800GT: (0)
Click here to write your review for Geforce 8800GT
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So basically don't visit any sites from .cn (Score:2)
Google still hasn't fixed their open redirector (Score:5, Informative)
After reading this, I immediately checked to see if Google had fixed their open redirector. [google.com] No, they haven't, and there are six exploits of it listed in PhishTank. Google needs to turn that off. If they absolutely insist on having an open redirector, it needs its own subdomain, which is what Yahoo does. Then the subdomain can be blacklisted without collateral damage.
Phishing via exploits of major sites is a big problem, but involves a small number of major sites. 168 major sites today. [sitetruth.com] The usual exploits are:
Out of 1.6 million domains in DMOZ, and over 10,000 phishes in PhishTank, only 168 domains are in both. So the number of sites that need to be fixed is small. In fact, some of those sites are already fixed, but the entries haven't been removed from PhishTank yet. (Hint: if you kill a hostile page on your domain, make it a 404 error; that gets the page out of PhishTank's "active and online" list automatically. Don't just change the content or redirect it somewhere else, or it stays in the tank until somebody rechecks it manually, which can take weeks.)
For every site in the list, there's some competitor in the same business who isn't on the list. "Everybody has this problem" isn't a valid excuse any more. This is a useful point to make with management if you find your own company on the list.
This list of 168 exploited sites is updated automatically every three hours. There's also a list of sites recently removed from PhishTank. "n-insanity.com", "tropmet.res.in", "wsjob.com" were dropped from the list today; they no longer have active, online entries in PhishTank. "gentlesource.com", "t35.com" (an eBay phish), "tilapia.com" (another eBay phish), and "uic.edu" (already fixed) were added; they just appeared in PhishTank. If you have any responsibility for a site on the list, please take steps to fix the problem. If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem.
Meanwhile, in other news ... (Score:2)
Swik (Score:2)
Re:Some, but not all.... (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Some, but not all.... (Score:5, Funny)
GOATSE I'M FEELING LUCKY REDIRECT (Score:2, Interesting)
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=373765&cid=21513421 [slashdot.org]
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sweet
Don't CLick (Score:2)
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If your browser looked like that then I'm pretty sure PEBKC, because mine sure as hell never did.
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It's not Google's burden to quell IE (or Firefox, Opera, etc) exploits.
No-one said it is.
It is however Google's burden to quash spyware sites that exploit loopholes and weaknesses in Google's ranking and indexing algorithms that allow such malware to effortlessly make it to the front page of search results for any thousand of subjects.