Streaming sites operated by the BBC were hacked on Tuesday so they
silently served visitors with malware, researchers from security firm
Websense said.

An iframe tag on the BBC's 6 Music and 1Xtra websites injected an
exploit that was housed on a website with an address ending in cc, a
top level domain for the Cocos Islands. The malicious binary was
generated by the Phoenix exploit kit, which dates back to 2007 and
streamlines malware infections by collecting detailed statistics.

“If an unprotected user browsed to the site they would be faced with
drive-by downloads, meaning that simply browsing to the page is enough
to get infected with a malicious executable,” Websense researchers
wrote in a blog post.

A VirusTotal scan showed that only nine of the top 43 antivirus
products detected the threat.

The discovery continues the trend of using legitimate websites to
propagate malware. Who needs to lure marks to fake sites when popular
ones are easy to compromise?

Websense didn't say how attackers managed to plant the wayward iframe
on the BBC's sites. More often than not, the rogue links are added
with the help of SQL injection attacks or, less often, by exploiting
compromised passwords

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