
Pharming Attacks Target the Web
Surfers may be unknowingly redirected to malicious Web pages.
Paul Roberts, IDG News Service
Friday, April 01, 2005
A new round of so-called "pharming" attacks is
targeting the .com Internet domain, redirecting some Internet users who
are looking for .com Web sites to Web pages controlled by the unknown
attackers.
The SANS Institute's Internet Storm Center (ISC)
issued a warning this week about the new attacks, which corrupt some
DNS (domain name system) servers so that requests for .com sites sent
to those servers connect users instead to Web sites maintained by the
attackers. News of the new attacks comes amid increasing reports of pharming scams,
and statistics that show at least 1300 Internet domains were redirected
to compromised Web servers in a similar attack earlier in early March.
ISC advised network operators to block traffic
to and from the IP addresses involved in the attack to stop the
redirection, according to information posted on the ISC Web site.
DNS is a global network of computers that
translates requests for reader-friendly Web domains, such as
www.pcworld.com, into the numeric IP addresses that machines on the
Internet use to communicate.
Cache Poisoning
The latest attacks use a strategy called DNS
cache poisoning, in which malicious hackers use a DNS server they
control to feed erroneous information to other DNS servers. The attacks
take advantage of a vulnerable feature of DNS that allows any DNS
server that receives a request about the IP address of a Web domain to
return information about the address of other Web domains.
Internet users who rely on a poisoned DNS server
to manage their Web surfing requests might find that entering the URL
of a well-known Web site directs them to an unexpected or malicious Web
page.
Pharming attacks are similar to phishing identity theft attacks,
but don't require a "lure," such as a Web link that victims must click
on to be taken to the attack Web site. The attacks have been increasing
in recent months, as Internet users become more savvy about traditional
phishing scams and online criminal groups look for new ways to collect
sensitive information or financial data from victims, according to The
Anti-Phishing Working Group.
In the latest attack, a rogue DNS server posed
as the authoritative DNS server for the entire .com Web domain. Other
DNS servers that were poisoned with this false information redirected
all .com requests to the rogue server, which responded to all .com
requests with one of two IP addresses. Web pages at those addressed
displayed a search engine and an advertisement for a Web site,
www.privacycash.com.
Neither Web page used in the attack was available early Friday.
In a similar DNS cache poisoning attack in early
March, requests from more than 900 unique Internet addresses and more
than 75,000 e-mail messages were redirected, according to log data
obtained from compromised Web servers that were used in the attacks,
ISC says.
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