The official website of the United Nations has yet to fix a vulnerability that more than two years ago allowed hacktivists to replace official content with their own activist messages.
According to Errata Security CEO Rob Graham, the same SQL injection flaw that plagued the site in August of 2007 remains unfixed now:
http://erratasec.blogspot.com/2009/08/uns-website-still-vulnerable-after-2.html It's invoked by doing nothing more than adding a stray character to the ASP parameter of a un.org link, such as
http://www.un.org/apps/news/infocus/sgspeeches/statments_full.asp?statID=10'5."Despite the fact a high-school intern can fix the bug in 5 minutes, the bureaucracy means that the organization must spend tens of thousands of dollars to fix the bug," Graham wrote. "The other lesson is that the cost of NOT fixing the bug is low. The UN can simply live with the problem, and clean up after every hack."
As The Register reported in 2007, hacktivists used the bug on the UN's Apache-powered website to replace speeches by Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon with pacifist messages. While that attack appeared to be the work of activist critics of the global organization, it's not a stretch to imagine criminals hacking the site to surreptitiously send visitors to sites that push malicious drive-by exploits.
Messages seeking comment from the UN went unanswered.
(Register)