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  • (01. January 2010., 10:27:49)









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Topic Summary

Posted by: Samker
« on: 04. September 2009., 19:20:56 »


flashplayer 0.2 is a bit old though, aren't we on 10 now, lol

Good one...  :up:
Posted by: mashed
« on: 04. September 2009., 12:12:12 »

thanks for the heads up :)

flashplayer 0.2 is a bit old though, aren't we on 10 now, lol
Posted by: blodflekk
« on: 03. September 2009., 06:23:56 »

Yes, thats what I though, I have been running 3.5.2 since its release
Posted by: Samker
« on: 02. September 2009., 22:27:04 »

Are we going to see an update from Mozilla to patch this?

We already have new Update 3.5.2, but I'm not sure that they patch this problem... ;)

Posted by: blodflekk
« on: 02. September 2009., 14:57:46 »

Are we going to see an update from Mozilla to patch this?
Posted by: Samker
« on: 02. September 2009., 07:20:23 »



Miscreants have created an item of spyware targeted at Firefox users.

The malware poses as an Adobe Flash Player update but in reality its designed to log a user's browsing history, in particular their Google search queries within Firefox. This information is uploaded to a hacker-controlled server.

EBOD-A also has the capability to inject ads into the user’s Google search results pages, Trend Micro warns, which adds that the malware appears to be spreading via forum posts.

The spyware creates a Firefox add-on called "Adobe Flash Player 0.2", which has nothing to do with either Adobe or Mozilla. More on the threat can be found in a write-up by Trend, which includes screenshots, here: http://blog.trendmicro.com/firefox-addo-spies-on-google-search-results/#ixzz0Ps0pxL4F

Malware targeting Firefox users is rare but not unprecedented. Strains of malware that latch onto Internet Explorer, Microsoft's Swiss-cheese browser, are much more commonplace. Common IE-related malware trickery involves exploiting unpatched security vulns to download malware onto vulnerable machines via drive-by download attacks.

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