Skip to navigation
   
Davey Winder's Blog

One million Facebook users exposed to Zango worm

By Davey Winder in Editorial

Posted in Blog, Spyware, Facebook, Security, Internet on January 3, 2008 at 11:12 pm

Permalink | Author Profile

Given the popularity of Facebook applications, those annoying widgets which people in your network naturally assume you will be interested in (even though most are banal even by widget standards), it was only a matter of time before the trend was exploited by those with a less than social motive. And so it is that security threat researchers at Fortinet have uncovered a malicious widget which has already found its way onto the computers of 3% of Facebook users - or a million people if your prefer.

The Secret Crush application spreads by Facebook users getting a notification from someone in their network who has already installed the widget, which informs them that one of their friends has the hots for them. The wording is such that suggests it might be the friend who sent the invitation, but the only way to find out is to install the application itself. At this point the plot thickens, because using an escalation of commitment strategy Secret Crush the widget once installed will only reveal the identity of your secret admirer once you have invited another 5 of your friends to install it. According to Fortinet, even after inviting those 5 friends there is no revelation other than an invitation to download a ‘crush calculator’.

Fortinet has examined the page source of the advertising frame that is displayed and discovered it is hosted at zango.com, within the affiliates section. Downloading the application actually leads directly to a copy of Zango, the in famous adware/spyware that used to be known as 180Solutions. Download this and rather than a secret crush you will find yourself being courted by adverts.

Although there is no way of knowing the exact figures, the authors of Secret Crush are likely to be getting a few pence for every download, which multiplied by a million or two clicks soon adds up.

Fortinet CMO Richard Stiennon included “malicious Facebook widgets” in his list of security threat predictions for 2008, and it looks like he was right on the money. There seems to be no mechanism in place at Facebook to protect users from this kind of malicious application. Hackers could implement a similar scheme but replacing the Zango IFrame with a drive-by install engine instead.

“Keep in mind that, given the odds, people are likely developing Facebook “Platform Applications” for profit rather than just for fun. Now, this does not mean that all widgets are going to be malicious. As in every business frame, honest ways to generate profits surely exist on Facebook, in exchange for providing a service to users who subscribe to it. However, users must be aware of this, and resort to a blend of common sense and protection gear to avoid being scammed and abused” advises Fortinet EMEA Threat Response Team Manager Guillaume Lovet.

12345
Rated: 100% (1 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

Previous Post | Next Post

 
 
Comments
This article has no comments yet.

Make a comment

* required

* required

We stop spam using reCaptcha.
Type the words below and click Submit Comment.

   
Tag cloud

Palm Pre economics Patents policy Architecture dumb Texting Cisco workplace snooping hubdub OS work Data Centre Research patch management privacy YouTube students payments PS3 technology economy acquisition Employment Beta black hat Gartner VPN services development IT Porn Conference eBook malware search Government Gateway Energy MSN Windows 7 migration Application politics e-commerce Nexus compromise Army Nintendo campaign Notebooks Guardian Netbook Steve Ballmer stupidity Dell storage football Gadget patent iPhone Scotland web smartphone Web Development code Digg SMS open source hoax Spotify adware Jobs Parenting Deal SSL Windows Phone 7 Series IP gaming environment fun Kindle Linux Top 500 Palm law christmas Yahoo shopping Google prison surveys staffing books Experiment report money cloud botnet worker rootkits remote working fake tax ROFL science virtual machine ID Theft home encryption Software XP Mobile Phones console VM hacker Browser Video tech scan Project Review information Space banking Media iPhone 3GS Russia Networks Licensing Geeks mobile Hack virtualisation chips Kill Switch Backlash Rumour Election USA Advertising fraud Death universe Adobe holidays Psychic symantec Apps hardware Twitter Obama computing gadgets Big Brother e Analysis survey support data protection digitise Windows news Trojan mail Meh desktop computers ISPA Top 10 Eee linkedin productivity FBI wifi theft App Store meme terrorism museum Game data iPhone 3G InfoSec fool Olympics biometrics Intel documentation Mars Business second life Study Blog management Military BSI iPad Funny Performance computing copyright iPod Mobile Phone Acer MiniBook Madness Sony ecommerce transactional security The Federation banks AMD Developers hypervisor Banned nightmare trust millions parental control CAPTCHA Texas Instruments man-in-the-middle MSNBC recession monetisation Lotus Recall graphics global Microchip service McKinnon Sex Harry Potter broadband crime MessageLabs Amazon Finjan email green Android poll GMail School Europe Silverlight Opinion Ballmer outsourcing social networking ASUS Battery Tesco standards Kaspersky office betting Mafia innovation carbon copy Firefox China worm Psion spending Addiction App President Facebook Digital Footprint Supercomputer sick Bill Gates Enterprise IBM family Marketing hacking admin size Eee PC NBC Retail RAM printing archiving Jesus Phone Browsers Google Earth Paris Hilton avatar statistics virtual world EU HP Rant earth hour ISP phishing Programming scareware Michael Jackson DNS network memory HPC Children credit crunch help debian web 2.0 Apple teleworking OCR Kin virus lawsuit Flash NASA Internet Explorer spam Voice VeriSign Noro stupid IDC Steve Jobs Blogging credit card fraud Trousers games remote Health Internet exploit scam Microsoft Press Education Zango BOFH Vista computer Pirate disclosure GSM Johnny Depp library security payment server xmas Music RATM world of warcraft
Advertisement
Advertisement