This week in Infosec - 2008-09-29
Monday, September 29th, 2008
A snapshot of topics of personal interest that have been talked about in the IT Security realm over the past week.
Threats/Countermeasures
Browser Security
While reading about the new attack vector called Clickjacking, I came across a useful article by US-Cert titled Securing Your Web Browser.
The guide covers specifics for both IE and Firefox, and is a must read.
Social Engineering
Get your passwords here, less than $10 USD
Brits Give Up Passwords For a £5 Gift Voucher
Attack Vectors/Trends
Clickjacking
Discovered by Robert Hansen and Jeremiah Grossman. From: Clickjacking: Researchers raise alert for scary new cross-browser exploit
With this exploit, once you’re on the malicious web page, the bad guy can make you click on any link, any button, or anything on the page without you even seeing it happening.
Seems to rely on DHTML which cannot be disabled in browsers easily.
Work around - for the trusting types: don’t visit un-trusted sites and fill out any forms - be safe and wait for vendor patches.
Work around - for the paranoid: use Lynx or Links.
More info from US-Cert: Multiple Web Browsers Affected by Clickjacking
US-CERT is aware of public reports of a new cross-browser exploit technique called “Clickjacking.” According to one of the reports, Clickjacking gives an attacker the ability to trick a user into clicking on something only barely or momentarily noticeable. Therefore, if a user clicks on a web page, they may actually be clicking on content from another page. A separate report indicates that this flaw affects most web browsers and that no fix is available, but that disabling browser scripting and plug-ins may help mitigate some of the risks.
An additional report suggests that Firefox users consider using the NoScript plug-in as an added preventative measure. Disabling IFRAMEs by default, as outlined in the Securing Your Web Browser document, is reported to protect against the vulnerability.
News and Analysis
Blackberry
India’s government: At last, we’ve cracked Blackberry’s encryption
If this is true, why are we trusting Blackberry devices in the enterprise?
Good: We know they’ve cracked it.
Bad: Brings home the point that government knows everything about us.
Oh, I guess this is good:
“… still unable to crack BlackBerry Enterprise Service’s end-to-end AES or Triple DES, doesn’t really count as cracking Blackberry’s encryption.”
Google Chrome
Still more vulnerabilities coming out about this beta product.
Makes me think bout something - one positive about “old” code is that it’s been fully tested - most of the low-hanging-fruit should be worked out.
Much of Chrome is established code - but it looks like in the parts Google had to write - lots of issues.
Apple + Security == NULL
Java on Apple Mac OS X 10.5.4 and 10.5.5 does not prevent applets from accessing file:// URLs, which allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary programs.
National Cyber Security
Estonia posts their national Cyber Security Strategy
I’ll be reading it this week.
I think it’s pretty compelling to have a national strategy guide. I wonder how long the US document would be. I think it would take more than a decade to write, given the myriad of federal agencies that would need to be involved.
Bureaucracy = security fail.
It’s been a busy last week, and this week looks no less busy. I’ve missed out on some of my favorite blogs this past week, but will hopefully catch up if I can!
See you next week
