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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday May 27 2020, @02:40PM   Printer-friendly
from the taking-liberties dept.

eBay users spot the online auction house port-scanning their PCs. Um... is that OK?:

Updated Users visiting eBay have spotted that the website runs port scans against their computer, using the localhost address to inspect what may be running on your machine.

Fraud is a big issue for eBay, and if the purpose of scanning for remote-control access ports is an attempt to detect criminals logged into a user's computer in order to impersonate them on the tat bazaar, it could have some value. The behaviour, however, was described as "clearly malicious" by security researcher Charles Belmer.

The script attempts WebSocket connections to a number of ports, including 3389 (Microsoft remote desktop), 5931 (Ammy Admin remote desktop), 6333 (VNC remote connection), 7070 (realAudio and Apple QuickTime streaming) and more. The script is running locally so it is not testing for ports exposed to the internet, but rather for what is running on your local network. The port scanning script does not always run. We have only seen it run on Windows, and normally only on the first visit to eBay after some unspecified period.

Developer Dan Nemec used browser debugging tools to trace what is going on – a job made harder, he said, by JavaScript code that is "re-obfuscated on every page load" so that variables names change every time.

It is odd, though: not all the code is obfuscated, so if the script's creators really wanted to cover their tracks they could have done a better job.

Nemec did discover several points of interest, however. One is that the source of the script, called check.js, is src.ebay-us.com, which is a CNAME record pointing at h-ebay.online-metrix.net, which belongs to an organisation called ThreatMetrix Inc, part of LexisNexis Risk Solutions.

Following the scan, Nemec observed, the web page requests images, again from the Threat Metrix domain, which return a 204 code meaning "no content". The payload is in the argument accompanying the requests, which when decrypted contains the results of the port scan and other information, including the user agent (browser identifier), public IP address, and "other data, signatures and things I don't recognize," said Nemec.

[...] Updated to add

eBay got back to us to say that it is "committed to creating an experience on our sites and services that is safe, secure and trustworthy," though it has not responded to any specific concerns over privacy or security. We understand that the reason for the port scanning script is fraud prevention, seemingly by flagging up machines that may be under remote control by miscreants.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 28 2020, @11:04AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 28 2020, @11:04AM (#1000127)

    Gumtree is available in many countries alongside other, regional boards. And here's the situation in my country, for these informed:
    1. The main local auction site was good since 2001 until about 2012. Now, they became monopoly, so they decided to go eBay way, including running malware on a computer, blocking users and taking money not for auction, but for showing shipping option (!). There is an alternative, in the last 10 years they had TWO auctions: One in 2012 called "TEST - DO NOT BID" and the second was in 2017 called "TEST TEST TEST".
    2. The main auction site bought the main local classified ads site, which means that they pushed personal auctions away from auctions and forced them to the classifieds. Simultaneously they raised prices of these small ads so high that now I visit a bunch of hobby forums to get info who is selling what. Many people started to move to Gumtree.
    3. The main classified ads site, along revamp of auction site discussed earlier, got a web interface which is unbearable intentionally only to force users install a rogue app which requires access to GPS, camera and microphone.
    There certainly must be some technology to solve these problems. But I think the main problem is between chair and keyboard.