Jump to content

Palestinian Hackers Attempted to Hijack Avast Website


Matsuda

Recommended Posts

zoom-avast-redesenha-interface-do-antivi


Palestinian hackers of KDSM Team, the ones who defaced the websites of Avira, AVG and WhatsAppon Tuesday, also attempted to hijack the site of Avast. However, the company says it took immediate steps and managed to contain the attack.

Avast confirms that the hackers compromised the systems of Network Solutions, which allowed them to change DNS records and redirect the visitors of the aforementioned websites to their own defacement page.

“We ourselves received a notification from Network Solutions saying our email had been changed. We knew we had not requested that so we immediately took action and changed our passwords, which protected us,”stated Vincent Steckler, Avast CEO.

All of the impacted companies are investigating the matter. In the meantime, there’s still no word from Network Solutions regarding the incident.




Source

Edited by Matsuda
Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Replies 4
  • Views 1.3k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • DKT27

    1

  • Tarik

    1

  • truemate

    1

  • XorRanger

    1

Popular Days

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Administrator

WhatsApp, AVG, Avira, Alexa websites hacked in apparent DNS hijack

Network Solutions is investigating an attack by a pro-Palestinian hacking group that redirected websites belonging to several companies.

Owned by Web.com, Network Solutions registers domain names, provides hosting services and sells other website-related administration services.

A group calling itself the KDMS Team claimed responsibility on Twitter. The websites affected included those of the security companies AVG and Avira; the messaging platform WhatsApp; a pornography site, RedTube; and Web metrics company Alexa.

John Herbkersman, Web.com's senior director for public communications, said Network Solutions was aware of the problem.

"Cybercrime today is rampant," he said. "We just continue to try to do our best to bring in the best people and bring in the best equipment."

Avira said its own network and customers were not affected, but that the DNS (Domain Name System) records -- administered by Network Solutions -- were changed to point to other domains, which is known as DNS hijacking.

"It appears that our account used to manage the DNS records registered at Network Solutions has received a fake password-reset request which was honored by the provider," the company wrote on its blog. "Using the new credentials, the cybercriminals have been able to change the entries to point to their DNS servers."

No malicious code was delivered by the domain to which Avira Web surfers were redirected to, the company said.

Hackers have had notable successes in recent months compromising DNS providers. The DNS allows a domain name, such as idg.com, to be translated into an IP address that can be called into a browser.

Companies such as Network Solutions hold those DNS records, which if modified, can send Web surfers to different domains.

Earlier this week, hosting provider LeaseWeb saw its main domain redirected to an incorrect IP address after hackers apparently obtained the administrator password from the company's domain registrar. The KDMS team said it was responsible for that hack.

In August, hackers compromised an Australian IT services company, Melbourne IT, and modified DNS records that affected Twitter, The New York Times, the Huffington Post and ShareThis. A pro-Syrian group, the Syrian Electronic Army, claimed responsibility.

Melbourne IT said an account belonging to a reseller of its services was compromised through a targeted spear-phishing attack, which allowed hackers to change the DNS records for several domains. Spear phishing involves sending an email with malware or a malicious link intending to infect the recipient's computer.

KDMS, which could not be immediately reached, posted several screenshots on Twitter, including one that affected WhatsApp's domain. The message asserted that the region known as Palestine has been stolen, and that prisoners should be released from Israeli jails.

"We want peace," the message read. "Long live Palestine."

view.gifView: Original Article

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...