Pop-up program reads keystrokes, steals passwords
Takeaway: Trojan horse has watch list of banking sites. Victims visit sites, type in passwords, hand info to hackers.
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Robert Lemos
CNET News.com
A malicious program that installs itself through a pop-up can read keystrokes and steal passwords when victims visit any of nearly 50 targeted banking sites, security researchers warned on Tuesday.
The targeted sites include major financial institutions, such as Citibank, Barclays Bank and Deutsche Bank, researcher Marcus Sachs said Tuesday.
"If (the program) recognizes that you are on one of those sites, it does keystroke logging," said Sachs, director of the
Sachs said the Trojan horse was first discovered on the computer of "an employee at a major dot-com." The victim apparently picked up the program from a malicious pop-up ad that used a flaw in Internet Explorer's helper server to install itself on the user's PC. In this case, because of the computer's security settings, the installation failed. Microsoft said IE users should
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Two other IE flaws, which Microsoft has yet to fix, were used recently in two other hacking schemes, one last week that
Researchers at the Internet Storm Center studied the Trojan horse file, called "img1big.gif," which was provided by the dot-com. Working through the weekend, the security experts reverse-engineered the program and discovered that it targeted a long list of banks and attempted to steal the account information of those institutions' customers.
The program points to a recent trend in computer viruses and remote-access Trojan horse, or RAT, programs:
"In the past, the most common way to collect financial information was through fraud like
Because it carries a .gif file extension, the Trojan horse appears to be a graphic in a compressed format commonly found on the Internet. In reality, it's two programs: a browser helper file that surreptitiously captures usernames and passwords; and a "file dropper" that installs the keyword logger on the victim's computer.
The first file attempts to run itself by using an old Internet Explorer flaw, and the second file uses a feature of most major browsers, known as helper files, to intercept data, Sachs said.
"Before data goes through your browser, it can be processed by a helper file," he said. "What makes this one really clever is that (it takes) advantage of the ability in all browsers to use helper files and defeat the encryption."
Once the Trojan horse captures financial information, it encrypts the data by using a program hosted on an Internet server and sends the data back to the attackers, who appear to be in South America, Sachs said.
Security experts have
An attack that had used a vulnerability to turn some Web sites into points of digital infection was
While the latest program is installed on Windows computers using a known vulnerability, the helper file hack exploits a feature, not a flaw, and could work with most major browsers, Sachs said.
"Sometimes, there's not much difference between a feature and a flaw," he said.
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