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Hackers have released software that exploits a recently disclosed flaw in the Domain Name System (DNS) software used to route messages between computers on the Internet.
Podcast: DNS flaw-fix hype addressed
The attack code was released Wednesday by developers of the Metasploit hacking toolkit.
Internet security experts warn that this code may give criminals a way to launch virtually undetectable phishing attacks against Internet users whose service providers have not installed the latest DNS server patches.
Attackers could also use the code to silently redirect users to fake software update servers in order to install malicious software on their computers, said Zulfikar Ramizan, a technical director with security vendor Symantec. "What makes this whole thing really scary is that from an end-user perspective they may not notice anything," he said.
The bug was first disclosed by IOActive researcher Dan Kaminsky earlier this month, but technical details of the flaw were leaked onto the Internet earlier this week, making the Metasploit code possible. Kaminsky had worked for several months with major providers of DNS software such as Microsoft, Cisco and the Internet Systems Consortium (ISC) to develop a fix for the problem. The corporate users and ISPs who are the major users of DNS servers have had since July 8 to patch the flaw, but many have not yet installed the fix on all DNS servers.
The attack is a variation on what's known as a cache poisoning attack. It has to do with the way DNS clients and servers obtain information from other DNS servers on the Internet. When the DNS software does not know the numerical IP address of a computer, it asks another DNS server for this information. With cache poisoning, the attacker tricks the DNS software into believing that legitimate domains, such as idg.com, map to malicious IP addresses.
In Kaminsky's attack a cache poisoning attempt also includes what is known as "Additional Resource Record" data. By adding this data, the attack becomes much more powerful, security experts say.
An attacker could launch such an attack against an ISP's domain name servers and then redirect them to malicious servers. By poisoning the domain name record for www.citibank.com, for example, the attackers could redirect the ISP's users to a malicious phishing server every time they tried to visit the banking site with their Web browser.
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Comments (4)
Link to test your DNSBy Anonymous on July 29, 2008, 12:05 pmThe site of the guy who discovered the vulnerability http://www.doxpara.com -> click the Chick My DNS Button DNS Operations, Analysis, and Research Center (DNS-OARC) https://www.dns-oarc.net/...
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trying itBy Anonymous on July 25, 2008, 6:53 amim gonna try on major ISPS here in Canada lol
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Big ISPs moving slowlyBy Anonymous on July 24, 2008, 11:21 amYou would think that big ISPs would be aware of this problem, but RoadRunner (tx.rr.com) not only has not fixed their DNS servers (verified yesterday by testing)...
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great helpBy yangfuyeh on July 24, 2008, 9:32 amThis article can help me to let the student knowing why they take more notice of the patch or hotfix!
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