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IBM and Websense are separately issuing their semiannual security trend reports this week, and the picture isn't pretty for Web sites, open source software and social networking programs.
The IBM Internet Security Systems "Midyear Trend Statistics" report tracked 3,534 disclosed vulnerabilities in software for the first half of the year, a 5% increase from the first half of 2007. When it comes to the Top Ten worst offenders in terms of vulnerabilities, big players like IBM, Microsoft, Apple, Sun, Cisco and Oracle continue to make the list. But this time they are joined by names in the open source software community: Joomla!, Drupal, WordPress and Linux.
"IBM makes a lot of software, and companies that make a lot of software are subject to more disclosures," says Tom Cross,
X-Force researcher at IBM ISS, by way of explaining why IBM and other software giants make the Top Ten disclosures list.
But this is the first time that community-developed open source software such as the Drupal and Joomla! content-management software packages for the Web also showed up on the list.
Drupal and Joomla! are open source packages that "have both been vulnerable to SQL injection attacks," Cross says.
The first half of this year will be remembered far and wide for SQL injection attacks. A massive series of such attacks struck
earlier this year across the Internet, hitting Web sites based on Microsoft's Internet Information Server.
Vulnerabilities in both proprietary and open source software has led to a spike in SQL injection as well as cross-site scripting
attacks that allow perpetrators to compromise Web servers, loading them up with malicious code for their own designs.
According to the Websense "State of Internet Security Q1-Q2" report, the situation regarding compromised Web sites is becoming
dire.
"Sixty percent of the of 100 most-popular Web sites have been hosting malicious code or inadvertently distributing it," says Stephan Chenette, manager of the Websense Security Labs, adding, "75% of malicious Web sites in general are actually legitimate Web sites that are compromised." That's a huge jump from last year when Websense surmised that number stood at 51%.
Some popular Web sites inadvertently hosting malicious code during the last half include CNET.com, MSNBC.com and News.com, Chenette says. "We've seen malicious code on Yahoo.com, Excite.com and perl.com, which is popular with developers. We've seen banner ads, which can be purchased on Yahoo, used for malicious code."
Blog sites, such as Google blogspot, have become popular spots to post malware, and social-networking sites Facebook, MySpace and YouTube have been tarnished by postings of malicious content as well. This first half of 2008 saw spammers develop tools for beating the CAPTCHA Web security mechanism to prevent automated posting of content, Websense states in its report.
Another disturbing trend, according to IBM ISS, is that exploit code for vulnerable software is being publicly disclosed more frequently than it was in the past.
Comments (9)
Triavializing Security!!By Anonymous on July 29, 2008, 2:25 pmI think the problem here is we seems to be doing very little when it comes to security. We rather write-off those vulnerabilities or treat them with triviality as...
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?By Anonymous on July 29, 2008, 12:07 pm?
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FUD on DrupalBy Anonymous on July 29, 2008, 1:10 pmWhat the "analyst" doesn't say is that the Drupal security issues are openly disclosed by the Drupal community in the context of updates that address the issues....
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Sources of this information?By Anonymous on July 29, 2008, 6:37 pmI really must question the validity of these "reports". The author quotes 'Drupal and Joomla! are open source packages that "have both been vulnerable to SQL injection...
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Sophos v. WebsenseBy Anonymous on July 30, 2008, 10:44 amUnique web filtering for both security and productivity.
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I hate being solicitedBy Schratboy on July 30, 2008, 12:07 pmSee subject
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