New browser sniffs out phishy sites
By Paul Festa
http://news.com.com/New+browser+sniffs+out+phishy+sites/2100-1029_3-5473252.
html

Story last modified Wed Dec 01 12:54:00 PST 2004

A browser launched on Wednesday with the promise to both detect "phishing"
sites and nail an increasingly prevalent type of floating Web ad.

Deepnet Explorer, a browser shell that uses Microsoft's Internet Explorer to
render Web pages, analyzes Web addresses and combs through its own list of
suspect sites to determine whether a site might be part of a phishing scam,
in which fraudsters attempt to get personal and payment information from
unsuspecting visitors.

Phishing scams have become more sophisticated and common, though a report
released today suggests that the monetary cost of the trend has been
exaggerated.

Version 1.3 of the browser, previously available in a test, or "beta"
version, also takes aim at a new kind of Web advertisement that has been
evading pop-up blocking software.

The ads, called "floating" or "overlay" ads, move around on the screen and
are immune to the pop-up controls increasingly common in browsers and
browser toolbars.

"We've seen a lot of these adverts recently," Deepnet CEO Yurong Lin said.
"It's the new trend in advertising because the pop-up blockers are so
popular."

Check here to see whether an e-mail that appears to be from your bank or an
online merchant is actually an attempt to defraud you.

Pop-up blockers generally work by detecting and foiling a Web script command
to open a new window. But floating ads rely on a more involved scripting
object that keeps the pixels moving in an existing window.

Deepnet Explorer 1.3 also introduces an application that lets Web surfers
monitor cookies, or files that a Web site places on a visiting computer to
keep track of preferences and other personal information. Another feature
lets people create groups of browser tabs within a single window. Tabbed
browsing has emerged as a must-have feature for Web browser software trying
to compete with or expand on IE, which doesn't offer tabs.

For Version 1.3, Deepnet added content from news headline aggregator
Moreover Technologies. For future versions, the company is in negotiations
with Google to provide general search results.

Lin dismissed criticism that the Deepnet browser's phishing detector could
lull users into unwarranted complacency. Critics have noted that some
phishing schemes work on legitimate sites through code sneaked onto Web
surfers' computers.

"Antivirus companies are looking for viruses, but phishing sites are not
viruses, and you need something like Deepnet to find those sites," Lin said.
"I think we complement each other."

Lin also defended his company's decision to stick with the IE rendering
engine. IE has gotten criticism by some Web developers, who have rapped both
its security and its standards support. Open-source options such as the
Mozilla Foundation's Gecko software have won better security and standards
reputations in recent years.

"Over the last several years, IE became the de facto standard browser, so
most Web sites are designed to work with IE," Lin said. "If we chose
something like Mozilla, it's going to not display a lot of Web pages
properly."

But Lin said Deepnet has considered doing something like Netscape did
yesterday with its release of a prototype browser that gives surfers the
option of switching back and forth between browser engines.

"That's something we've been talking about internally," Lin said. "It's
possible for us to support multiple engines. The only problem is engineering
resources. To provide compatibility for Gecko would require a lot of
development work."



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