A Turkish hacking group managed to tamper with Internet addressing records over the weekend, redirecting dozens of websites belonging to companies including Microsoft, UPS and Vodafone to a different web pages controlled by the hackers.
According to Zone-H, a website that tracks defacements, 186 websites were redirected to a page controlled by “Turkguvenligi.” A message on the redirect page read: “4 Sept. We Turkguvenligi declare this day as World Hackers Day – Have fun h4ck y0u.”
All of the websites were registered through NetNames, which is part of NBT group. NetNames provides DNS services for the websites, which is the system used to translate a domain name into an IP address that found by web browsers.
Turkguvenligi managed to hack NetName’s DNS servers through a SQL injection attack, which involves putting commands into a web-based form to see if the back-end database responds. If those commands aren’t scanned for malicious code, an attacker could gain access to the system.
In the case of NetNames, Turkguvenligi put a redelegation order into the company’s system and changed the address of the master DNS servers that served data for the websites, according to a statement from NetNames. The attack occurred late on Sunday.
“The rogue name server then served incorrect DNS data to redirect legitimate web traffic intended for customer websites through to a hacker holding page branded Turkguvenligi,” the statement read. “The illegal changes were reversed quickly to bring service back to the customers impacted and the accounts concerned have been disabled to block any further access to the systems.”
The hack accomplished by Turkguvenligi is a powerful one. Although it appears the goal of the group was just to vandalise the sites for a while, the group could have set up lookalike sites for the real ones, tricking users into thinking they were on the legitimate site and possibly stealing logins and passwords.
Two of HSBC’s banking sites were targeted, one with a country-code Top Level Domain in South Korea and one in Canada, according to the list compiled by Zone-H.
Other websites affected were those belonging to The Telegraph newspaper, The Register technology news site, Coca-Cola, Interpol, Adobe, Dell, several Microsoft country sites, Peugeot, Harvard University and the security companies F-Secure, BitDefender and Secunia. The website for Gary McKinnon, the alleged NASA hacker who is appealing extradition to the US, was also hit.
The Register wrote that its website was not breached and that service was restored about three hours after the attack.
“As far as we can tell there was no attempt to penetrate our systems,” wrote Drew Cullen. “But we shut down access/services – in other words, anything that requires a password – as a precaution.”
DNSSEC, a security measure now being deployed by many registrars to guard against DNS tampering may not have prevented this kind of attack, said Paul Mutton, a security analyst with Netcraft. “If the attacker was able to change the DNS settings held by the domain registrar, presumably they could also have changed other settings, such as disabling DNSSEC, or rather, simply change the DNS settings to point to nameservers that do not support DNSSEC.”
DNSSEC uses public key cryptography to digitally “sign” the DNS records for websites. It is designed to stop attacks such as cache poisoning, where a DNS server is hacked, making it possible for a user to type in the correct website name but be directed to a fake website.
NetNames described the attacks against its systems as being “sustained and concentrated.” “We will continue to review our systems to ensure that we provide our customers a solid, robust and above all secure service,” it said.
View full post on National Cyber Security » Computer Hacking