The software maker urged the more than 1 billion users of
Flash on Windows, Mac, Chrome and Linux computers to update the product
as quickly as possible after security researchers said the bug was being
exploited in "drive-by" attacks that infect computers with ransomware
when tainted websites are visited.
Ransomware encrypts data, locking up computers, then demands
payments that often range from US$200 to US$600 to unlock each infected
PC.
Japanese security software maker Trend Micro Inc said that it had
warned Adobe that it had seen attackers exploiting the flaw to infect
computers with a type of ransomware known as 'Cerber' as early as March
31.Cerber "has a 'voice' tactic that reads aloud the ransom note to create a sense of urgency and stir users to pay," Trend Micro said on its blog. (http://bit.ly/1L9YYMP)
Adobe's new patch fixes a previously unknown security flaw.
Such bugs, known as "zero days," are highly prized because they are
harder to defend against since software makers and security firms have
not had time to figure out ways to block them. They are typically used
by nation states for espionage and sabotage, not by cyber criminals who
tend to use widely known bugs for their attacks.
Use of a "zero day" to distribute ransomware highlights the
severity of a growing ransomware epidemic, which has disrupted
operations at a wide range of organizations across the United States and
Europe, including hospitals, police stations and school districts.
Ransomware schemes have boomed in recent months, with increasingly sophisticated techniques and tools used in such operations.
"The deployment of a zero day highlights potential
advancement by cyber criminals," said Kyrk Storer, a spokesman for
FireEye Inc. "We have observed ransomware and crimeware deployed via
'zero-day' before; however, it is rare."
FireEye said that the bug was being leveraged to deliver
ransomware in what is known as the Magnitude Exploit Kit. This is an
automated tool sold on underground forums that hackers use to infect PCs
with viruses through tainted websites.
Exploit kits are used for "drive-by" attacks that
automatically seek to attack the computers of people who view an
infected website.
(Reporting by Jim Finkle; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Kenneth Maxwell)
- Reuters
Post a Comment