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First Firefox 4 update coming on April 26

Author: Omid Farhang Published: April 12, 2011 Reading Time: 1 min

Mozilla Links: Mozilla has announced that it will release the first update for Firefox 4 on April 26, about a month after the original release, back in March 22. New with this release is that Mozilla will start using code names (somehow related to the main branch codename, in this case Tumucumaque) for udpates as well, as a way to help developers that follow Firefox development closely, more clearly understand what is coming when. ...

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A new security flaw hits VLC

Author: Omid Farhang Published: April 12, 2011 Reading Time: 1 min

H-Online: Following on from last week’s S3M vulnerability in the VLC media player, a new advisory warns of a buffer overflow when playing MP4/MPEG-4 files.The bug, reported by Aliz Hammond, requires that a user open a specially crafted MP4 file. According to Secunia, the vulnerability is found in the MP4_ReadBox_skcr()function in the demultiplexer and is rated as “highly critical”. All versions from 1.0.0 to 1.1.8 are affected by the problem. ...

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BBC News/Dad walks in on daughter Facebook scams

Author: Omid Farhang Published: April 12, 2011 Reading Time: 2 min

SophosLabs: Criminals and scammers on Facebook aren’t resting on their laurels… in fact, they are branching out and using multiple techniques all rolled into one scam. Tonight’s blockbuster spam is taking on several guises. One version is a likejacking attack that spams your wall with the message “Dad walks in on daughter… EMBARRASING!!!” and “This really has to be an awkward moment.” They seem to be quickly rotating through a long list of Google (goo.gl) short URLs to evade detection. ...

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Zero-Day Vulnerability in Adobe Flash Player, Reader and Acrobat

Author: Omid Farhang Published: April 12, 2011 Reading Time: 1 min

Avira TechBlog: Adobe released a security advisory in which it warns from a zero-day vulnerability within current version of Adobe Flash Player, Reader and Acrobat. Affected are Flash Player 10.2.153.1 and earlier versions for Windows, Mac, Linux and Solaris, the current version integrated in the Chrome web browser, and 10.2.156.12 and earlier versions for Android. The authplay.dll component of current and older version of Adobe Acrobat and Reader are also affected; according to Adobe, the sandbox of Acrobat Reader X prevents from execution of malicious payloads though. ...

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Twitter spam and viagra galore

Author: Omid Farhang Published: April 11, 2011 Reading Time: 1 min

Spam mails claiming to be from Twitter that send you to pharmacy sites are a popular wheeze for spammers, and here we go again. It seems I have “two PR messages from Twitter”. If that wasn’t enough to get me clicking (it isn’t), I can also join in on sports conversations, argue with bloggers and tell the World when I stumble into some form of natural disaster. Hammering one of the many links will actually take me to 219(dot)84(dot)119(dot)56/afternoon(dot)html, which will send me to pharmacydrugstorehealthprofessionals(dot)net. ...

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Fake Certificate in Malware – with Message

Author: Omid Farhang Published: April 11, 2011 Reading Time: 1 min

Avira TechBlog: The malware authors every now and then send us virus researchers some messages. For example in the compiled binary itself, or as debug output. Now we found a Zbot Trojan variant which tries to evade detection by carrying a digital certificate and therewith looking more legitimate. And this certificate is registered to “DetectMe! 🙂 ”, also adding random data behind the certificate. We see hints like these regularly – malware authors proposing names for their malicious creations or suggesting a place where a signature based detection would be suitable. Of course, such hints are ignored by us for detection but make us smile for a short time. ...

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ZeroAccess, an advanced kernel mode rootkit

Author: Omid Farhang Published: April 11, 2011 Reading Time: 2 min

Prevx Blog: In the last couple years there have been three major players who dominated the scene in the field of the kernel mode rootkit development. They are Rustock rootkit – with its latest build discovered in the wild in 2008 – MBR rootkit – firstly discovered in January 2007 – and TDL rootkit, which can be considered the most advanced kernel mode rootkit to date, able to infect both x86 and x64 versions of Windows operating system. ...

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My Facebook wall has been viewed X times – viral survey scam spreads rapidly

Author: Omid Farhang Published: April 4, 2011 Reading Time: 3 min

SophosLabs wrote: Do you want to know the total number of times that your Facebook wall has been viewed? Are you curious as to who may be stalking you on Facebook? If so, you’re a prime candidate for scammers who are exploiting that desire to put money into their own pockets. Here are the latest messages spreading virally between thousands of Facebook users who have fallen for the scam: ...

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Comodo Group Issues Bogus SSL Certificates

Author: Omid Farhang Published: April 2, 2011 Reading Time: 2 min

from Schneier on Security by Schneier: This isn’t good: The hacker, whose March 15 attack was traced to an IP address in Iran, compromised a partner account at the respected certificate authority Comodo Group, which he used to request eight SSL certificates for six domains: mail.google.com, www.google.com, login.yahoo.com, login.skype.com, addons.mozilla.org and login.live.com. The certificates would have allowed the attacker to craft fake pages that would have been accepted by browsers as the legitimate websites. The certificates would have been most useful as part of an attack that redirected traffic intended for Skype, Google and Yahoo to a machine under the attacker’s control. Such an attack can range from small-scale Wi-Fi spoofing at a coffee shop all the way to global hijacking of internet routes. ...

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Massive SQL injection attack making the rounds—694K URLs so far

Author: Omid Farhang Published: April 1, 2011 Reading Time: 3 min

Thanks to my friend, Pondus! Ars Technica: Hundreds of thousands of URLs have been compromised—at the time of writing, 694,000 (it’s over millions of site when you are reading this)—in an enormous and indiscriminate SQL injection attack. The attack has modified text stored in databases, with the result that pages served up by the attacked systems include within each page one or more references to a particular JavaScript file. ...

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