By
Joris Evers
Thursday, March 09 2006 10:36 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,39323567,00.htm
An upcoming version of Firefox will include protection against phishing
scams, using technology that might come from Google.
The phishing shield is a key new security feature planned for Firefox 2,
slated for release in the third quarter of this year, Mozilla's Mike Shaver said
in an interview Tuesday.
"Everybody understands that phishing is a significant problem on the Web,"
said Shaver, a technology strategist at the company, which oversees Firefox
development. "We are putting antiphishing into Firefox, and Google is working
with us on that."
With the continued
rise in online attacks, security tools have become something Web browser
makers can use to try to stand out. Microsoft plans to include features to
protect Web surfers against online scams in Internet Explorer 7, due later in
2006. Similar functionality is already in Netscape 8 and Opera 8, both released last year.
"It is another example of the energy that has returned to the browser marker," Shaver said.
Phishing is a prevalent
type of online scam that attempts to steal sensitive data such as user
names, passwords and credit card details. The attacks typically combine spam
e-mail and fraudulent Web pages that look like legitimate sites. A record 7,197
phishing Web sites were spotted in December, according to Anti-Phishing Working Group.
While Firefox 2 will get a phishing shield, no decision has been made on how
it will be incorporated in Firefox, Shaver said. "Google, like others who
contribute to the project, has contributed code and expertise for us to
experiment with," he said. "We haven't committed to a given approach, a given
technology or a given partner."
Google has close ties to Firefox. A year ago, the Mountain View, Calif.-based search engine
giant hired Ben Goodger, a lead engineer on the open-source Web browser. Firefox is also
part
of the Google Pack, a bundle of Google's own and third-party applications.
The search company could not be immediately reached for comment.
Fighting fraudsters
Although IE and Firefox, the two most-used Web
browsers, don't include antiphishing features yet, there are browser
add-ons that guard against such scams. These include the Google Safe Browsing plug-in for Firefox and Microsoft's MSN
Toolbar for IE. Other providers include
Netcraft and SiteAdvisor.
The various phishing shields use a variety of techniques to protect against
the online scams. These include blacklists of known fraudulent Web sites, white
lists of good sites and analyses of Web addresses and Web pages. Firefox 2 might
be different, since the developers aren't married to those approaches, Shaver
said.
"I don't think anybody has found a perfect solution," he said. "We would not
look to do something different just for the sake of being different, but we
don't want to be constrained by recent history either."
Regardless of what technology ends up in Firefox 2, people who want to use a
different antiphishing product will be able to do so, Shaver said.
Adding antiphishing technology to Web browsers helps with online security,
but is not a panacea, said Amir Orad, vice president of marketing at RSA
Security's Cyota group. "We think it is very important. It doesn't solve the
problem, but it is a step in the right way," he said.
Cyota, an antiphishing specialist, provides lists of known fraudulent Web
sites to Microsoft for IE 7 and to Netscape, as well as others. "It is an arms
race, another tool in the arsenal," Orad said. RSA Security acquired Cyota last year.
An early, alpha release of Firefox 2 is expected later this month, but it
likely won't include the antiphishing features. "We don't want to rush it to get
it into that alpha," Shaver said. "But things can move pretty fast in our world
and if we come up with something that we like the looks of we might put
something in experimentally."
Other planned security features in Firefox 2 are support for a stronger type
of digital certificate, a so-called
high-assurance certificate. At the same time, the new browser likely will
drop support for less secure certificates, Shaver said.