Trojan Forces Firefox to Save Your Passwords - FaunaClassifieds
FaunaClassifieds  
  Tired of those Google and InfoLink ads? Upgrade Your Membership!
  Inside FaunaClassifieds » Photo Gallery  
 

Go Back   FaunaClassifieds > General Interest Forums > SOUND OFF!!!

Notices

SOUND OFF!!! Ever have something REALLY bugging you and nowhere to vent about it? Well, this is the place. It does not have to be fauna oriented at all! Get it off your chest right here.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 10-09-2010, 06:24 AM   #1
SamanthaJane13
Angry Trojan Forces Firefox to Save Your Passwords

A Firefox Trojan has been found to force the Internet browser to save user passwords and then use those passwords to create a new user account on the infected computer.

Most security researchers recommend that users tell Firefox not to remember their passwords, since saved ones are so easily extracted by malware.

The Trojan-PWS-Nslog malware discovered by security company Webroot, however, gets around user preferences altogether by actually deactivating the Firefox code that asks if it should save those passwords when the user logs into a secure site.

"Before the infection, a default installation of Firefox 3.6.10 would prompt the user after the user clicks the Log In button on a Web page, asking whether he or she wants to save the password," Webroot researcher Andrew Brandt explained in a blog post on Wednesday. "After the infection, the browser simply saves all login credentials locally, and doesn't prompt the user."

Specifically, the Trojan adds a few lines of code and "comments out" other portions of code from the Firefox file called nsLoginManagerPrompter.js, with the result that all passwords get saved locally without any input from the user.

Clues Left Behind

With that information, the Trojan creates a new account under the name "Maestro" on the infected computer. It then "scrapes information from the registry, from the so-called Protected Storage area used by IE to store passwords, and from Firefox's own password storage, and tries to pass the stolen information onward, once per minute," Brandt added.

The Web domain intended to receive the stolen data has already been shut down, but code inside the malware revealed the author's name and email address, which led Webroot to a Facebook page for a hacker based in Iran who provides a free keylogger creator tool targeting users of Microsoft Windows.

Webroot can easily identify and remove the Trojan from infected machines, it says. To fix the modified Firefox file, users should download the latest Firefox installer and install it over the existing installation. No bookmarks or add-ons will be lost in the process, Brandt said.

How to Make Firefox Forget

Mozilla's Firefox ranks second in global browser market share, according to Net Applications, with 23 percent of the browser market in September. The first beta release of Firefox 4 for Android phones just debuted this week.

By default, Firefox does remember passwords. To tell it not to, go to the Tools menu and select Options. From there, open the Security tab and uncheck the appropriate box, Webroot advises.

Follow Katherine Noyes on Twitter: @Noyesk.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/pcworld/2010...JvamFuZm9yY2Vz


I recommend that everyone update your antivirus/antispyware programs to protect your computers!!

I use AVG antivirus and Spyware Search & Destroy, Spyware Blaster and Ad-Aware programs.

Most of these are available from Majorgeeks.com.
 
Old 10-09-2010, 07:38 AM   #2
deborahbroadus
Quote:
Originally Posted by SamanthaJane13 View Post
A Firefox Trojan has been found to force the Internet browser to save user passwords and then use those passwords to create a new user account on the infected computer.

Most security researchers recommend that users tell Firefox not to remember their passwords, since saved ones are so easily extracted by malware.

The Trojan-PWS-Nslog malware discovered by security company Webroot, however, gets around user preferences altogether by actually deactivating the Firefox code that asks if it should save those passwords when the user logs into a secure site.

"Before the infection, a default installation of Firefox 3.6.10 would prompt the user after the user clicks the Log In button on a Web page, asking whether he or she wants to save the password," Webroot researcher Andrew Brandt explained in a blog post on Wednesday. "After the infection, the browser simply saves all login credentials locally, and doesn't prompt the user."

Specifically, the Trojan adds a few lines of code and "comments out" other portions of code from the Firefox file called nsLoginManagerPrompter.js, with the result that all passwords get saved locally without any input from the user.

Clues Left Behind

With that information, the Trojan creates a new account under the name "Maestro" on the infected computer. It then "scrapes information from the registry, from the so-called Protected Storage area used by IE to store passwords, and from Firefox's own password storage, and tries to pass the stolen information onward, once per minute," Brandt added.

The Web domain intended to receive the stolen data has already been shut down, but code inside the malware revealed the author's name and email address, which led Webroot to a Facebook page for a hacker based in Iran who provides a free keylogger creator tool targeting users of Microsoft Windows.

Webroot can easily identify and remove the Trojan from infected machines, it says. To fix the modified Firefox file, users should download the latest Firefox installer and install it over the existing installation. No bookmarks or add-ons will be lost in the process, Brandt said.

How to Make Firefox Forget

Mozilla's Firefox ranks second in global browser market share, according to Net Applications, with 23 percent of the browser market in September. The first beta release of Firefox 4 for Android phones just debuted this week.

By default, Firefox does remember passwords. To tell it not to, go to the Tools menu and select Options. From there, open the Security tab and uncheck the appropriate box, Webroot advises.

Follow Katherine Noyes on Twitter: @Noyesk.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/pcworld/2010...JvamFuZm9yY2Vz


I recommend that everyone update your antivirus/antispyware programs to protect your computers!!

I use AVG antivirus and Spyware Search & Destroy, Spyware Blaster and Ad-Aware programs.

Most of these are available from Majorgeeks.com.

Great post!!

I stopped using Firefox some time ago, althrough it is installed on my computer. Ummmm, maybe I should uninstall it just to be safe.
 

Join now to reply to this thread or open new ones for your questions & comments! FaunaClassifieds.com is the largest online community about Reptile & Amphibians, Snakes, Lizards and number one classifieds service with thousands of ads to look for. Registration is open to everyone and FREE. Click Here to Register!

 
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Trojan Forces Firefox to Save Your Passwords SamanthaJane13 FaunaClassifieds Site HELP & Feedback Forum 0 10-09-2010 06:22 AM


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:51 AM.







Fauna Top Sites


Powered by vBulletin® Version
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Page generated in 0.05499792 seconds with 10 queries
Content copyrighted ©2002-2022, FaunaClassifieds, LLC