McAfee warns of dangerous movies and music.
Researchers at
McAfee
‘s
Avert Labs
have warned of a new worm, dubbed ‘W32/Realor’, which doctors the contents of
Real Media
files (.rmvb) to redirect users to potentially dangerous URLs.
The worm does not ‘infect’ the media files in the standard sense, but instead manipulates the functionality of
Real
players to redirect anyone trying to view the files to a website, generally one containing an exploit enabling drive-by downloads. From there further copies of the worm or other malware can be installed to vulnerable systems.
‘As
Avert
researchers point out, the main danger of this worm lies in the public’s general assumption of safety when handling media files,’ said
John Hawes
, Technical Consultant at Virus Bulletin. ‘With the popularity of public-access media sites like
YouTube
, all media formats are becoming popular targets for malware exploitation, from both technical and social-engineering angles. Hopefully people’s trust in these formats is being eroded, and they’ll soon be treated like anything we get from the web should be – a potential danger until proven otherwise.’
A
McAfee
blog entry on the discoveries is
here
, with more in-depth analysis of the worm
here
.
Posted on 17 November 2006 by
Virus Bulletin
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