By
Ingrid Marson
Monday, January 10 2005 11:07 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39212469,00.htm
A vulnerability in Firefox could expose users of the open-source
browser to the risk of phishing scams, security experts have warned.
The flaw in Mozilla Firefox
1.0, details of which were published by security company Secunia on
Tuesday, could allow hackers to spoof the URL in the download dialog
box that pops up when a Firefox user tries to download an item from a
Web site. This flaw is caused by the dialog box incorrectly displaying
long sub-domains and paths, which can be exploited to conceal the
actual source of the download.
Mikko Hypponen, director of
antivirus research at software maker F-Secure, said this bug could make
Firefox users vulnerable to cybercriminals. "The most likely way we
could see this exploited would be in phishing scams," he said.
To fall victim to such a scam,
a Firefox user would have to click on a link in an e-mail that pointed
to a spoofed Web site and then download malicious software from the
site, which would appear to be downloaded from a legitimate site.
This flaw was given a severity rating of two out of a possible five by Secunia.
David Emm, a senior technology consultant at antivirus company
Kaspersky Labs, said that phishers aren't likely to take advantage of
this flaw in Firefox, because Microsoft's Internet Explorer still dominates the browser market.
"I think it's unlikely that we'll see hackers rush to exploit this
vulnerability," Emm said. "After all, Firefox has a much, much smaller
install base than IE, and it's likely that hackers will continue to pay
more attention to (IE) instead."
This may change in the future as Firefox has attracted a lot of interest
in the past few months. A survey at the end of November found that
Mozilla-based software, including Firefox, accounted for 7.4 percent of
browsers in November 2004, up 5 percent from May.
The download vulnerability has been confirmed in Mozilla 1.7.3 for
Linux, Mozilla 1.7.5 for Windows, and Mozilla Firefox 1.0. No solution
is available at present, but Mozilla developers are expected to fix
this bug in an upcoming version of the product.
The Secunia advisory and Mozilla bug report are available online.
Ingrid Marson of ZDNet UK reported from London.