Members
  • Total Members: 14197
  • Latest: Levine
Stats
  • Total Posts: 43438
  • Total Topics: 16532
  • Online today: 3056
  • Online ever: 51419
  • (01. January 2010., 10:27:49)
Users Online
Users: 3
Guests: 2928
Total: 2931









Post reply

Name:
Email:
Subject:
Message icon:

Verification:
Type the letters shown in the picture
Listen to the letters / Request another image

Type the letters shown in the picture:
Second Anti-Bot trap, type or simply copy-paste below (only the red letters):www.codekids.ba:

shortcuts: hit alt+s to submit/post or alt+p to preview


Topic Summary

Posted by: Samker
« on: 30. June 2011., 17:36:15 »



A popular Twitter-like service in China with 140 million users was hit by a worm earlier this week that resembles past attacks that infected Twitter and MySpace, according to a security analyst.

Sina Weibo, a microblog service in China, said the worm first appeared on Tuesday night at 8:20 p.m. Beijing time. Affected posts displayed a malicious link with enticing messages like "Move a woman's heart with 100 lines of poetry" or "Software to listen to other people's phones." When the link was clicked, the user's own account would re-post and send out private messages circulating the malicious link again.

Sina reported in a post to users on Wednesday that the worm had been stopped on the same night at 9:25 p.m. The problem stemmed from a flaw in the web pages that the worm could exploit.

Sina said it reported the matter to the public security and that it will take further steps to improve the safety of its social networking service.

Zhao Wei, CEO of Chinese security company Knownsec, said the worm was of a type that has affected many other social networking sites by exploiting cross-site scripting vulnerabilities. "Before, different kinds of worms have appeared on large social networking sites like Twitter, MySpace" he said. Other Chinese social networking sites have also been victims, he said.

In 2009, Twitter was hit with the "StalkDaily" worm created by a 17-year-old. The worm created thousands of spam messages on the site by getting users to click on a malicious link. Lack of attention to security resulted in these worm attacks from occurring, Zhao said. In the case of Sina's social networking site, only tens of thousands of microblog users were affected, Zhao estimated.

Sina Weibo is one of China's largest Twitter-like services, and has become a hot new destination for the country's Internet users, which number at 457 million, according to the China Internet Network Information Center.

(PCW)

Enter your email address to receive daily email with 'SCforum.info - Samker's Computer Forum' newest content:

Kursevi programiranja za ucenike u Sarajevu

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertising
TinyPortal 2.3.1 © 2005-2023