White-hat hackers have uncovered vulnerabilities on the websites of
anti-virus firms that created a phishing risk.

Cross-site scripting (XSS) bugs of varying severity were found on the
websites of Symantec
(here<http://nemesis.te-home.net/News/20100925_Symantec_Norton_com_eStore_XSS_Vulnerability.html>),
Eset 
(here<http://nemesis.te-home.net/News/20100926_Eset_ua_XSS_Vulnerability.html>)
and Panda Security
(here<http://nemesis.te-home.net/News/20100926_Pandasecurity_com_KB_XSS_Vulnerability.html>)
by Team Elite, the white-hat hackers who discovered the flaws. We notified
all three firms of the issue and all three responded by plugging the flaws
in good time.

Coding errors that give rise to cross-site scripting flaws are endemic in
web development. This class of vulnerability might, for example, allow a
hacker to present content from third-party sites (pop-ups, malicious scripts
etc.) as if it came from a site a surfer was trying to visit and that site
alone. As such these flaws are very handy for phishing attacks that attempt
to trick the unwary into handing over their credentials to untrusted sites.

A XSS flaw on Twitter's website was exploited by the infamous onMouseover
worm last month, a point security firms were jumping over themselves to
comment on. The XSS flaws on anti-virus firms websites were not exploited
and no harm was done.

Nonetheless Symantec et al should be especially careful to set a good
example in web security. That's what these firms sell after all, but
experience shows that XSS problems are commonplace even in the information
security vendor market.

And because groups such as Team Elite go looking for them these problems
regularly get a public airing. Even though there's evidence of miscreants
exploiting these vulnerabilities that's no reason to dismiss them, as one
Team Elite member explain in an email to *El Reg*.

"XSS vulnerability is a high level vulnerability which could allow an
attacker to steal sensitive data such as login information and other
credentials," he said. "I can assure you that our team does not do such
things, we don't hack any websites, we simply deliver the proof of concept,
spread the knowledge of existing vulnerability so the companies can correct
those bugs for the good of their own."

"I've noticed that all three security vendors have fixed the bugs on their
websites, which is very positive," he added. ®

@TheRegister


Regards

Sandeep Thakur

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