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posted by martyb on Thursday January 09 2020, @08:02PM   Printer-friendly
from the noscript dept.

From ZDNet:

Around half of the websites that use WebAssembly, a new web technology, use it for malicious purposes, according to academic research published last year.

WebAssembly is a low-level bytecode language that was created after a joint collaboration between all major browser vendors.

[...] However, while the vast majority of samples were used for legitimate purposes, two categories of Wasm code stood out as inherently malicious.

The first category was WebAssembly code used for cryptocurrency-mining. These types of Wasm modules were often found on hacked sites, part of so-called cryptojacking (drive-by mining) attacks.

The second category referred to WebAssembly code packed inside obfuscated Wasm modules that intentionally hid their content. These modules, the research team said, were found [as] part of malvertising campaigns.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 10 2020, @03:28PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 10 2020, @03:28PM (#941897)

    webpages are like books in a library.
    books with colors are maybe websites with css?
    books that pop-up are maybe websites with javascript and books written with poisonous water soluble ink are probably websites with webassembly?