Microsoft is telling systems administrators to make sure they have installed a previously announced patch to guard against security problems currently affecting Web sites using the company's Internet Information Services (IIS) 5.0 server.
According to an advisory released by Microsoft, companies that haven't yet installed Update 835732 detailed in Microsoft Security Bulletin MS04-011 appear to be at risk from the ongoing attack.
Users who have already deployed Windows XP Service Pack 2 RC2 appear to be protected, the company said.
The Microsoft advisory is in response to what appears to be a continuing attack against IIS 5.0 servers worldwide. The attack, first discovered yesterday by several security firms, involved a group of Russian hackers breaking into Web sites running IIS 5.0.
Stephen Toulouse, program manager at Microsoft's security response center, said the software vendor began investigating the problem after being told about it last night by customers.
All early indications point to IIS 5.0 servers being affected, he said, although Microsoft hasn't yet positively identified the flaw being exploited. Evidence so far suggests that the attackers are breaking into IIS servers via a previously disclosed buffer-overrun problem in the Private Communications Transport protocol, which is part of the Microsoft Secure Sockets Layer library.
That problem was addressed with the MS04-011 patch, which is why Microsoft recommends that users install it, he said.
Meanwhile, desktop systems can be infected via two vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer, one of which has an available patch and one that doesn't, Toulouse said.
Microsoft is working on a patch for the problem, Toulouse said, without specifying when the company might have one ready. But users who keep their systems updated with the latest antivirus patches or have the high-security setting turned on while browsing the Internet should be reasonably protected, he said.
Following Microsoft's advice would be a "prudent thing to do" for now, said Marty Lidner, an incident-handling team leader at the CERT Coordination Center at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh.
It would also be smart for administrators running IIS 5.0 to ensure there is no unusual JavaScript code appended to the bottom of the Web pages served up by their sites, said Russ Cooper, editor of "NT Bugtraq" and an analyst at Herndon, TruSecure.
He also urged them to "check to see if you have document footers enabled when they are not supposed to be."
According to an advisory by Computer Associates International, a Trojan horse program named JS. Toofer or JS. Scrob is installed on vulnerable IIS servers. When executed, this JavaScript attempts to access a file hosted on another server. When users visit compromised Web sites, their systems are directed by Scrob to download a file containing malicious code such as Trojan horses and keystroke loggers from a Russian Web site.
"IIS servers are first compromised and then configured to host malicious JavaScript in the footer of Web pages hosted on the server," Ken Dunham, director of malicious code at iDefense, said in a note earlier Friday. "End users simply surf Web sites hosted by the IIS server and get infected with additional malicious code."
Rather than being an attack targeted at specific sites, this appears to be an attempt by the hackers to find any vulnerable IIS server they can break into, Cooper said.
"My belief is that the attackers were trying to do this very quietly maybe using bots," he said. "They didn't really care what IIS boxes were getting compromised."
Confusion remains over how widespread the infections are. According to Lidner, CERT found infections on about 100 Web sites of varying sizes yesterday and informed their operators of the problem. But many other Web sites are likely to be infected that CERT is unaware of, he said.
The number also doesn't include end-user systems that may have been compromised from visiting infected Web sites.
According to Dunham, "hundreds of thousands" of computers are likely to have been infected in the past 24 hours.
As of this afternoon, the infection doesn't appear to have affected overall Internet performance, according to Keynote Systems, a Web performance measurement and management firm. "The Keynote Business 40 Internet Performance Index is not showing any performance or availability problems at this time for the Internet's top Web sites," the company said Friday.
The Russian Web site being used to download malicious code to infected systems is also no longer available, either as a result of law-enforcement action or because the hackers have been scared away, Lidner said. That fact alone makes the threat less potent for the moment, he said.
The incident once again serves to demonstrate the need for due diligence when it comes to security, Lidner said. "This stuff happens all the time. People tend to lose sight of that," he said.
Last September, for instance, a security breach at Atlanta-based Web hosting provider Interland Inc. resulted malicious code being appended to the bottom of Web pages hosted on the company's servers. As with the current threat, end users that visited infected Interland-hosted sites faced the risk of malicious code being downloaded on their systems from a Russian Web site.
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This week CW Live chats with Mark Thompson, global sales and marketing manager for HP ProCurve, on the future of the enterprise networking. Mark discusses the trends we can expect to see in the near future and how the right infrastructure can ensure your enterprise network is secure. - +
Computerworld Live Podcast #96: Security at the Edge 11/06/2008 09:22:22
CW Live speaks with Amol Mitra, HP ProCurve Director of Marketing for Asia Pacific and Japan. Today's topic: how enterprises are starting to shift away from simply controlling security via server logins, firewalls and moving to more adaptive security frameworks. - +
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