DNS cache poisonings foist malware attacks on BraziliansDNS cache poisonings foist malware attacks on Brazilians'Desperate cries' from those visiting innocent sites
By Dan Goodin in San Francisco
Posted in Malware, 7th November 2011 21:18 GMT
An attack on several Brazilian ISPs has exposed large numbers of their subscribers to malware attacks when they attempt to visit Hotmail, Gmail, and other trusted websites, security researchers have warned.
The attacks work by poisoning the domain name system cache that the service providers use to translate domain names such as google.com into internet protocol numbers such as 74.125.224.144. By replacing legitimate IP addresses with ones leading to servers controlled by attackers, the hack is causing end users to be surreptitiously directed to sites that exploit software vulnerabilities on their computers or trick them into installing malware.
“Last week, Brazil's web forums were alive with desperate cries for help from users who faced malicious redirections when trying to access websites such as YouTube, Gmail and Hotmail, as well as local market leaders including Uol, Terra and Globo,” Fabio Assolini, a researcher with antivirus provider Kaspersky Labs, wrote in a
blog post published on Monday. “In all cases, users were asked to run a malicious file as soon as the website opened.”
Assolini said the browser of one machine Kaspersky researchers tested displayed a warning when opening
hXXp://www.google.com.br instructing them to install a program called Google Defence
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