Syrian Electronic Army attack leads to malvertising

Published: 2014-11-27. Last Updated: 2014-11-27 20:33:03 UTC
by Russ McRee (Version: 1)
2 comment(s)

A number of online services were impacted by what has been referred to by multiple sources as a redirection attack by Syrian Electronic Army (SEA) emanating from the Gigya CDN. The issue was described as follows: "Gigya explained that earlier today at 06:45 EST, it noticed “sporadic failures with access to our service”. The organization than found a breach at its domain registrar, with the hackers modifying DNS entries and pointing them away from Gigya’s CDN domain, instead redirecting to their own server, which distributed a “socialize.js” file, namely the pop-up seen by everyone." Affected sites included Verizon, The Telegraph, The Independent, Forbes, Time Out, PC World, The Evening Standard, CNBC, and others.

The resulting pop-up simply stated "You've been hacked by the Syrian Electronic Army." Sadly, attacks of this nature are commonplace, and SEA has chosen the holidays in previous years to step up its activities so be prepared with your response plan and recovery procedures.

2 comment(s)

Comments

Hi

We have received a couple of such pop-ups,This is only creating panic in our employees, I plan to make an announcement that we are aware of such an issue and they need not panic.
Everyone either update or double check that Flash either is not installed or cannot be invoked via Internet web sites.
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sara

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