Toolbox
  • User rankingRating: 4.1
  • Add to favoritesBookmark
  • Save as PDFSave as PDF
  • PrintPrint
  • EmailEmail
  • Blog ItBlog It
  • Stumble ItStumble It!
Digg It Reddit del.icio.us Save to Yahoo! bookmarks Save to Windows live Share on facebook Save to MySpace Slashdot it science news feed Add to google
- size +

Internet flaw could let hackers take over the Web (Update)

A man tries to access a website at an Internet cafe during a disruption of Internet service. Computer industry heavyweights are hustling to fix a flaw in the foundation of the Internet that would let hackers control traffic on the World Wide Web.
A man tries to access a website at an Internet cafe during a disruption of Internet service. Computer industry heavyweights are hustling to fix a flaw in the foundation of the Internet that would let hackers control traffic on the World Wide Web.

Computer industry heavyweights are hustling to fix a flaw in the foundation of the Internet that would let hackers control traffic on the World Wide Web.
Major software and hardware makers worked in secret for months to create a software "patch" released on Tuesday to repair the problem, which is in the way computers are routed to web page addresses.

"It's a very fundamental issue with how the entire addressing scheme of the Internet works," Securosis analyst Rich Mogul said in a media conference call.

"You'd have the Internet, but it wouldn't be the Internet you expect. (Hackers) would control everything."

The flaw would be a boon for "phishing" cons that involve leading people to imitation web pages of businesses such as bank or credit card companies to trick them into disclosing account numbers, passwords and other information.

Attackers could use the vulnerability to route Internet users wherever they wanted no matter what website address is typed into a web browser.

Security researcher Dan Kaminsky of IOActive stumbled upon the Domain Name System (DNS) vulnerability about six months ago and reached out to industry giants including Microsoft, Sun and Cisco to collaborate on a solution.

DNS is used by every computer that links to the Internet and works similar to a telephone system routing calls to proper numbers, in this case the online numerical addresses of websites.

On Tuesday the US Computer Emergency Readiness Team (CERT), a joint government-private sector security partnership, issued a warning to underscore the serious of so-called DNS "cache poisoning attacks" the vulnerability could allow.

"An attacker with the ability to conduct a successful cache poisoning attack can cause a nameserver's clients to contact the incorrect, and possibly malicious, hosts for particular services," CERT said.

"Consequently, web traffic, email, and other important network data can be redirected to systems under the attacker's control."

"People should be concerned but they should not be panicking," Kaminsky said. "We have bought you as much time as possible to test and apply the patch. Something of this scale has not happened before."

Kaminsky built a web page, http://www.doxpara.com , where people can find out whether their computers have the DNS vulnerability.

Kaminsky was among about 16 researchers from around the world who met in March at Microsoft's campus in Redmond, Washington, to figure out what to do about the flaw.

"I found it completely by accident," Kaminsky said. "I was looking at something that had nothing to do with security. This one issue affected not just Microsoft and Cisco, but everybody."

The cadre of software wizards charted an unprecedented course, creating a patch to release simultaneously across all computer software platforms.

"This hasn't been done before and it is a massive undertaking," Kaminsky said.

"A lot of people really stepped up and showed how collaboration can protect customers."

Automated updating should protect most personal computers. Microsoft released the fix in a software update package Tuesday.

A push is on to make sure company networks and Internet service providers make certain their computer servers are impervious to web traffic hijackings using the DNS attack.

The patch can't be "reverse engineered" by hackers interested in figuring out how to take advantage of the flaw, technical details of which are being kept secret for a month to give companies time to update computers.

"This is a pretty important day," said Jeff Moss, founder of a premier Black Hat computer security conference held annually in Las Vegas.

"We are seeing a massive multi-vendor patch for the entire addressing scheme for the internet - the kind of a flaw that would let someone trying to go to Google.com be directed to wherever an attacker wanted."

Hackers using the vulnerability to attack company computer networks would also be able to capture email and other business data.

Kaminsky alerted US national security agencies to the crack in cyber warfare defenses.

"This really shows the value-add of independent security researchers," said former Department of Homeland Security National Cyber Security Division director Jerry Dixon.

© 2008 AFP
» Next Article in Technology - Internet: Facebook could see a standoff over Scrabble

would you recommend this story?

 

User Rating

4.1 out of 5 after 43 total votes
  • not at all
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • highly

Leave a Comment or

Rank filter

Move the slider to adjust rank threshold, so that you can hide some of the comments.
Posted by superhuman 07/08/08 17:00
Rank: 5/5 after 2 votes
If the flaw was there for years it was probably exploited many times already.

And http://www.doxpara.com/ is dead.
Posted by Falcon 07/08/08 17:23
Rank: 2.5/5 after 2 votes
super that probably just means that you are protected.
Posted by Glis 07/08/08 17:36
Rank: 3.33/5 after 3 votes
Ohh no! Not the hackers! I hear they're going to hold the internet for ransom until we make |3375q34|< the national language... /\/[][][]!

Are they talking about IP spoofing in this article?
Posted by the_dude 07/08/08 17:58
Rank: 4.5/5 after 2 votes
take out the comma at the end, probably just a typo but there is no code it just says please stand by
Posted by am_Unition 07/08/08 18:12
Rank: 5/5 after 2 votes
Don't worry, the internet will never be un-hackable ;)

At least, until we start employing quantum entanglement in a couple decades...
Posted by Mercury_01 07/08/08 19:20
Rank: 3.43/5 after 7 votes
NOW IS THE TIME FOR ME TO REVEAL MY SELF AS THE TRUE ARCHITECT OF PHYSORG.COM! HAHAHAHA! I NOW HAVE ALL YOUR EMAIL ADRESSES! EXPECT MUCH MORE COCK PILL JUNK MAIL IN THE NEXT PHASE OF MY EVIL SCHEME: OPERATION SELL MORE COCK PILLS!! HAHAHAHAHA!!!!
Posted by GuruShabu 07/08/08 19:23
Rank: 3/5 after 1 vote
It is NOT dead.
There is a typo in the web address published by Physorg.
The right one is:
http://www.doxpara.com/
and it works!
Posted by bobwinners 07/09/08 00:10
Rank: 4.75/5 after 4 votes
Patch.. WHAT patch? Supplied by who and applied to what?
Posted by Eco_R1 07/09/08 01:38
Rank: 5/5 after 4 votes
a patch to apply on your fore head!!!
Posted by StevenL 07/09/08 02:02
Rank: 4/5 after 1 vote
I don't see something like this happening. One hacker pulls it off, others will get p'd off that he is losing traffic to their sites.
Posted by seanpu 07/09/08 11:04
Rank: 4.5/5 after 2 votes
the problem has been known for a few years and has already been exploited by curious individuals. its often used in wifi attacks to reroute traffic to another computer which acts as a proxy or gateway, or alternate DNS server, thus allowing access to the wifi's internet connection and the ability to sniff traffic on the network.
Posted by CWFlink 07/09/08 12:51
Not rated yet.
What this highlights is the difficulty of writing secure software... it is easy to test that software does what it is intended to do, it is very hard to prove it does not do what it is not intended to do. Feed garbage into most software, and rather than just getting garbage out, you may actually take over the system!

DNS software is extremely basic to the Internet and has been reviewed and revised and "improved" by many, many programmers over the years... yet they all seemed to miss something critical.

Lesson: don't just specify what software is suppose to do, fully specify what it will do in response to all possible inputs... including timing between sequential inputs!
Posted by MrB398 07/09/08 13:26
Not rated yet.
Here is an interesting article I found in regards to the trends of databases

http://www.crimch...industry
Posted by menkaur 07/09/08 23:47
Not rated yet.
is it 1st of April?????
Posted by wawadave 07/13/08 15:01
Rank: 5/5 after 1 vote
All your internet are belong to us....