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Another IE Flaw exploited

Discussion in 'Internet Explorer & Microsoft Edge' started by PeteC, 2004/01/13.

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  1. 2004/01/13
    PeteC

    PeteC SuperGeek Staff Thread Starter

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    Please note - even though most folks are not resident in the UK :

    " Barclays scam email exploits new IE flaw
    By Matthew Broersma, ZDNet UK

    Con artists have begun using an address-hiding flaw to trick Barclays' online banking customers into revealing their personal details


    Customers of Barclays and other UK banks have been targeted by fraud emails that exploit a recently discovered vulnerability in Internet Explorer allowing attackers to disguise Web addresses, according to security experts.

    The Barclays scam email appears to come from the bank, and directs customers to a site posing as Barclays' online banking Web site, ibank.barclays.co.uk. The scam site then asks people to enter their banking details. Other scam emails appearing during the weekend also used this technique, known as "phishing ", along with the same IE bug. The organisations targeted include Citibank, Lloyds and PayPal.

    Banking scam emails are nothing new, but the use of the IE flaw represents an innovation, according to Internet services firm Netcraft, which analysed the Barclays message.

    "As part of our continuing commitment to protect your account and to reduce the instance of fraud on our Web site, we are undertaking a period review of our member accounts," the scam email reads. "You are requested to visit our site by following the link given below. This is required for us to continue to offer you a safe and risk free environment to send and receive money online, and maintain the Barclays IBank Experience."

    The bank last week warned users not to reply to any such emails or follow links that they contain. "Barclays is in no way involved with this scam email and the Web site does not belong to us," the bank said in a security alert on its site. "Barclays does not send emails to customers requesting your security or any other confidential information."

    The bank is requesting users to forward fraud emails to internetsecurity@barclays.co.uk.

    The email uses a glitch discovered last month that allows a specially crafted URL to load a browser window that appears to be displaying any address the attacker wants.

    For example, the source code of the Barclays fraud email contains the link:

    http://ibank.barclays.co.uk%
    01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01
    %01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01
    %01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01
    %01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01%01
    %01%01%01%01%01%01@%77%77%77%2E%6E%65%77%79%65%72%73%6
    D%2E%63%6F%6D:%38%30/%31%2C%2C%6C%6F%67%6F%6E%2C%30%30%
    2E %70%68%70

    In Internet Explorer, this is designed to display the address "ibank.barclays.co.uk" while actually directing users to a site, now offline, that was hosted by Affinity Internet. The characters such as "%01" encode the real address, which is "http://www.newyersm.com:80/1%2c%2clogon%2c00.php ".

    The flaw has the potential to undermine users' ability to determine what they should trust, eEye security research engineer Drew Copley said at the time of its discovery.

    "If [the address is] appearing legitimate like that, you can get people to download anything, run anything, or get a password or whatever," he explained.

    ZDNet Australia's Patrick Gray contributed to this report.
     
  2. 2004/01/13
    Abraxas

    Abraxas Inactive

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    Last edited: 2004/01/13

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  4. 2004/01/13
    Lonny Jones

    Lonny Jones Inactive Alumni

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    Here's how one would look
    see here
    EDIT >Well was supposed to look
    or copy paste into the address-bar to see the real URL

    Just saw this, dont know if its true

    One Big Monster IE Patch Day
    InternetNews.com - 2 hours ago
    ... security patches Tuesday under the new monthly release cycle, including a cumulative
    patch to plug some known vulnerabilities in the popular Internet Explorer
    http://www.internetnews.com/dev-news/article.php/3298251

    Lonny
     
  5. 2004/01/13
    markp62

    markp62 Geek Member Alumni

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    Interesting note on this.
    I tested my IE and Mozilla 1.5 at the Security.Openwares site and of course my IE was exploited. Mozilla did a little better as I got the full url in the Address Bar, but who really is going to notice anything after the "%1@" and note that is not really the site that is intended, or understand it?
    Any Netscape users want to try Abraxas's link?
     
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