Help | Contact | Forum | Affiliates | Press Purchase Download Features Screenshots Demo

Experts offer tips to deal with Gumblar malware

A number of security organizations are offering tips to deal with the Gumblar drive-by exploit, which is growing ever more pervasive.

Gumblar has spread rapidly because malicious JavaScript on compromised sites seems to be dynamically generated. That is, it can be different on every site, or even every page on a site.

“This is just the most recent example of legitimate sites being exploited to spread malware,” Samantha Madrid, a Cisco security product manager, told SCMagazineUS.com on Thursday. “What is unique to Gumblar is that it uses a multi-phased approach to propagate itself. It does not just deliver malware to the end-user.”

To deal with the problem, Cisco offers five tips to enterprises and web sites to deal with the problem: Make sure security protection is implemented for web servers and web applications. Also, educate and alert users to pay attention to pop-ups that warn them if they're about to proceed to a questionable site. In addition, it is important to include client-side protection to establish a layered defense. Organizations also should install gateway security that is capable of drilling down into every internet access request. And make sure perimeters are secured with auditable firewalls.

Read Original Story



News 1 year ago



Related Stories:

FCC must make ISPs crack down on spammers and malware

China requires ID to buy mobile phone numbers

Huge Spamming Botnet Injured but Still Alive

25% Of Malware Spread Via USB Drives

Rustock Botnet Changes Tactics

92% of e-mail is spam - 41% from single source

Scammers hit Twitter, Facebook, send free iPad spam

'LOL is this you?' spam spreading via Facebook chat

Google Fixes Gmail Bug That Turned Email into Spam

Symantec Warns of New Trojan Spam Campaign