Drive-By pharming
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Summary: |
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Secure wireless network Not securing your wireless network is akin to leaving your front door wide open for anyone to walk in. Even if you have a firewall, but do not protect the wireless end of your system, anyone will be able to access your computer or network. Someone with malicious intent can use your internet connection to attack other systems, or download illegal material such as child pornography. |
Advice: Example: Feb. 23, 2007 Abstract: According to a separate, informal study by Indiana University, up to 50 percent of home broadband users are susceptible to this attack. Symantec Security Response has teamed with the Indiana University School of Informatics to uncover a significant new security threat called "Drive-by Pharming." In this attack, consumers may fall victim to pharming by having their home broadband routers reconfigured by a malicious Web site. New Threat: Symantec Security Response teamed with the Indiana University School of Informatics to study a significant new security threat called "Drive-by Pharming." In this attack, consumers may fall victim to pharming by having their home broadband routers reconfigured by a malicious Web site. According to a separate, informal study by Indiana University, up to 50 percent of home broadband users are susceptible to this attack. With traditional pharming, an attacker aims to redirect a
user attempting to visit one Web site, to another bogus Web site. Pharming
can be conducted either by changing the host file on a victim's computer
or through the manipulation of the Domain Name System (DNS). Drive-by
pharming is a new type of threat in which a user visits a malicious web
site and an attacker is then able to change the DNS settings on a user's
broadband router or wireless access point. Drive-by pharming involves the use of JavaScript to change the settings of a user's home broadband router. Once the user clicks on a malicious link, malicious JavaScript code is used to change the DNS settings on the user's router. From this point on, every time the user browses to a web site, DNS resolution will be performed by the attacker. DNS resolution is the process by which one determines the Internet address corresponding to a web site's common name. This gives the attacker complete discretion over which web sites the victim visits on the Internet. For example, the user may think they are visiting their online banking web site but in reality they have been redirected to the attacker's site. These fraudulent sites are an almost exact replica of the actual site so the user will likely not recognize the difference. Once the user is directed to the pharmer's "bank" site, and enters their user name and password, the attacker can steal this information. The attacker will then be able to access the victim's account on the "real" bank site and transfer funds, create new accounts, and write checks. Symantec Security Response recommends that users employ a
multi-layered protection strategy: |

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