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posted by LaminatorX on Sunday August 16 2015, @05:39PM   Printer-friendly
from the Yet-Again dept.

Millions of people visiting weather.com, drudgereport.com, wunderground.com, and other popular websites were exposed to attacks that can surreptitiously hijack their computers, thanks to maliciously manipulated ads that exploit vulnerabilities in Adobe Flash and other browsing software, researchers said.

The malvertising campaign worked by inserting malicious code into ads distributed by AdSpirit.de, a network that delivers ads to Drudge, Wunderground, and other third-party websites, according to a post published Thursday by researchers from security firm Malwarebytes. The ads, in turn, exploited security vulnerabilities in widely used browsers and browser plugins that install malware on end-user computers. The criminals behind the campaign previously carried out a similar attack on Yahoo's ad network, exposing millions more people to the same drive-by attacks.

Update: A few hours after Ars published this article, Malwarebytes updated the blog post to say the campaign had moved to yet another ad network, which happens to be associated with AOL. Visitors to eBay were among those who were exposed to the malicious ads distributed through the newly discovered network.

Perhaps a positive side-effect of these exploits is the average person may come to pay more attention to security and privacy.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 17 2015, @12:26AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 17 2015, @12:26AM (#223685)

    My solution on my Chromebook is to have my user account set to turn off javascript by default. Whenever I need to use a site that requires it, I just drop into the Guest account. The guest account has no password and is wiped after each session so I don't have to worry about cruft getting left behind. I try not to use any online accounts that require logins or credentials on my guest account, just in case something nasty does show up.