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Malicious Infection Turns Your Computer Into a Spam-Sending 'Bot

The newest trend in Internet infection is growing at an alarming rate, according to Breach Security Lab's recently released Web Hacking Incidents Database (WHID) 2008 Annual Report. The attack is called an SQL injection and it works by corrupting the database layer of a Web site. This type of attack, once thought nearly obsolete due to the legwork required of the hacker, was resurrected when the hacking community began automating the process last June, allowing for a 300-percent increase in SQL injections in 2008.

The exploit essentially opens the infected site up to the hacker's whims. Once they gain control, they can install malware ranging from data stealers to viral spam. If you click on an exploited link and become infected, your secure information is compromised and your PC becomes susceptible to control by the infection, acting as a bot to help spread spam and deliver more infections to other computers. This means that infections can have near exponential growth; alarming, since some 500,000 sites have been infected, including government Web sites like the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's.

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Audio/Video, Computers

RIAA Web Site Hacked

RIAA Website HackedThe Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) hasn't made itself very popular over the past few years. Whether it's suing single mothers for a quarter-million dollars for sharing some songs online or telling you that ripping the CDs you purchased is illegal, the RIAA has made a lot of enemies over the past digital-music decade. Many people would like to see it go down. And down is just where the RIAA's site went over the weekend, an apparent victim of a security breach.

The site fell to a so-called SQL injection attack, where attackers put malicious text into search fields to gain access to databases. It's about the simplest form of Web site attack, requiring no special tools and not a lot of knowledge, a situation that doesn't say much for the state of the RIAA's site in the first place. Thankfully, SQL injection attacks impact only websites and not the people who visit them, so you at least don't have to worry.

In this case the attackers wiped out all of the site's text over the weekend, which has since been restored ... hopefully with a few more security checks thrown in there for good measure.

From BetaNews

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