Inconvenient content


Hackers include spammish content into Al Gore’s website.

Hackers have managed to break into a website set up to promote Al Gore’s film

An Inconvenient Truth

and include links to drug-selling sites,

PCWorld

reports. The hackers’ aim was to boost the search engine rankings of the websites linked to by creating links to a very popular website. The added content was invisible to regular users, but visible to search engine crawlers, and the hackers must have hoped for their attack to go unnoticed.

According to Adam Thomas, malware researcher at

Sunbelt Software

, the hackers probably made use of a vulnerability in

WordPress

, the popular blogging software used for the site’s blog. The spammish content, which has since been removed, is reported to have only been found on the blog.

The effects of this attack were limited, but could have been more significant had the hackers decided to include malware rather than links – as happened, for example, on the website of the

Bank of India

in September. The case demonstrates once again that restricting Internet browsing only to ‘trusted’ sites is not sufficient to avoid unwanted and malicious content. As always,

VB

urges both home and business users to ensure that their anti-malware software is up to date.

Posted on 28 November 2007 by

Virus Bulletin


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