I reported on something similar at Ynetnews (see 
http://blogs.pcmag.com/securitywatch/2007/11/and_suddenly_some_strange_site.php)
 about a week ago. I wonder if it's the same ad network.

The Ynet attacks persist. They knew about it probably at least 10 days ago and 
I saw it again yesterday, this time in Firefox. 
 
Larry Seltzer
eWEEK.com Security Center Editor
http://security.eweek.com/
http://blogs.pcmag.com/securitywatch/
Contributing Editor, PC Magazine
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, November 10, 2007 6:38 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: *SPAM* [funsec] More info on malware-scan.com ads on newspaper Web 
sites


Holy sh**.

Richard


http://www.azstarnet.com/business/209714

Maliciously coded online ad caused Star's Web site problems

By Jack Gillum

ARIZONA DAILY STAR

Tucson, Arizona | Published: 11.03.2007

advertisement



A maliciously coded online advertisement was responsible for causing problems 
for Tucson Newspapers' Web sites this week, the company said Friday.

 

The ads, which the company said were purchased with a fraudulent credit-card 
number, directed some Web visitors to sites that could have installed harmful 
software, or "malware."

 

The problem was reported Wednesday by the Pima County Department of 
Environmental Quality, which advised its employees not to visit the Arizona 
Daily Star Web site over computer-safety concerns. When their employees visited 
the Star's site, anti-virus software alerted them of trouble.

 

The fraudulent ad purchase was discovered Wednesday and the ad was removed 
Thursday, said Susan Hardin, director of online for Tucson Newspapers, which is 
jointly owned by the Arizona Daily Star and Tucson Citizen newspapers.

 

Hardin said the ads in question were bought by a company called ForceUp, which 
could not be reached for comment because a phone number for the company at an 
Idaho area code was disconnected, and an e-mail contact form was inaccessible.

 

Affected users were redirected to a different site and then presented with fake 
virus-scanning software that was itself malicious software.

 

Hardin recommends that users block access to malwarealarm.com, 
newbieadguide.com, and malware-scan.com, and delete infected files from a 
computer's PC and Windows registry.

 

Tucson Newspapers previously said that some video advertisements may have been 
the problem. But as of Friday, the company narrowed down the problem to the 
suspect ads, which Hardin said were up in the morning hours for the last 10 to 
18 days.

 

"This hasn't happened before, and our people reacted very quickly," said Tucson 
Newspapers President and CEO Mike Jameson. "We'll just have to be more vigilant 
in the future about these things."

 

The ad, Tucson Newspapers said, circulated to other newspaper sites across the 
country.

 

● Contact reporter Jack Gillum at 573-4178 or at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

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