Symantec: Hackers turn attention to Mozilla browsers

The growing popularity of Mozilla-based Web browsers appears to be attracting the attention of the malicious hacking community.

Between July 1, 2004, and Dec. 31, 2004, the number of documented vulnerabilities affecting the Mozilla browser and The Mozilla Foundation’s Firefox browser was higher than the number of vulnerabilities affecting Microsoft Corp.’s Internet Explorer, according to the latest Internet Security Threat Report from Symantec Corp. released Monday.

The report, which provides an update of Internet threat activity worldwide every six months, noted 13 vulnerabilities affecting IE. That compared to 21 vulnerabilities affecting the Mozilla and Mozilla Firefox browsers during the survey period.

IE, however, still had a higher proportion of serious vulnerabilities, with nine of the 13 flaws rated as highly severe. By comparison, 11 of the 21 Mozilla browser flaws were deemed highly severe, and just seven of Firefox flaws were seen as highly severe. The IE flaws also took longer to fix — an average of 43 days, compared to 26 days for Mozilla browsers. “

We are starting to see Firefox and Mozilla get more attention from attackers, and that is likely to continue,” said Alfred Huger, senior director of engineering at Symantec. “People who are writing Trojans and worms that get distributed via Web browser vulnerabilities are looking for the highest yield.”

Traditionally, IE has been the most targeted browser because of its widespread use, but that could begin to change as Mozilla browsers gain popularity, he said. Since 1997, Symantec has documented 313 vulnerabilities for IE, and less than 100 for Mozilla browsers.

Symantec’s study, based on information gathered from over 20,000 sensors deployed on customer networks in 180 countries, also noted a continuing rise in the number of new vulnerabilities discovered. Between July 1 and December 31, 2004, Symantec documented 1,403 new vulnerabilities — 13 per cent more than the 1,237 vulnerabilities found in the first six months of 2004. Out of these, nearly half — or 670 flaws — affected Web-connected applications, a 39 per cent increase over the first six months of 2004.

Nearly 97 per cent of the newly discovered flaws were rated as being of moderate to high severity, while 70 per cent were reported as being easy to exploit.

In a break from recent trends however, malicious attackers also appeared to be taking more time to exploit new vulnerabilities. In the latest study, the time it took hackers to exploit new flaws rose on average to 6.4 days, compared to 5.8 days previously.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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