Internet Explorer zero-day infection rates grow

Attackers are leveraging legitimate websites to more quickly spread malware that exploits a zero-day vulnerability in Internet Explorer (IE), Microsoft said this weekend.

The software giant estimated on Saturday that about 0.2 percent of worldwide IE users have surfed to websites that are hosting the exploit, according to the Microsoft Malware Protection Center blog. That number was up 50 percent from the prior day.

Researchers Ziv Mador and Tareq Saade said cybercriminals have used legitimate websites, such as a popular Taiwanese search engine, and a number of pornography sites to host the attack.

The vulnerability was announced Wednesday -- one day after Microsoft issued its monthly round of security fixes -- and affects all supported versions of IE, including the beta version of IE8. The flaw, according to Microsoft's advisory, relates to an invalid pointer reference in the data-binding function of IE.

Roughly 6,000 sites have been seeded with the malicious code, often to launch SQL injection attacks against visitors, Ivan Macalintal, advanced threats researcher at Trend Micro, said in a Saturday blog post. He said one of the infected sites was for a popular Chinese sporting goods retailer.

"Obfuscated JavaScript in the HTML webpages are also detected as JS_DLOAD.MD, the same malicious script found to exploit the zero-day vulnerability in IE (version) 7," he wrote.

Users are encouraged to apply suggested workarounds detailed in the advisory.

Sign up to our newsletters

More in News

Bitcoin mining botnet has become one of the most prevalent cyber threats

Fortinet researchers have tracked 100,000 new ZeroAccess trojan infections per week, making the botnet very lucrative to its owners.

House Intelligence Committee OKs amended version of controversial CISPA

House Intelligence Committee OKs amended version of controversial ...

Despite the 18-to-2 vote in favor of the bill proposal, privacy advocates likely will not be satisfied, considering two key amendments reportedly were shot down.

Judge rules hospital can ask ISP for help in ID'ing alleged hackers

Judge rules hospital can ask ISP for help ...

The case stems from two incidents where at least one individual is accused of accessing the hospital's network to spread "defamatory" messages to employees.