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Second Google Desktop vulnerability found

Second Google Desktop vulnerability found

By:  Robert McMillan  On: 25 Feb 2007 For: IDG News Service (San Francisco Bureau) Creator

Google Inc.'s PC search software is vulnerable to a variation on a little-known Web-based attack called anti-DNS (Domain Name System) pinning, that could give an attacker access to any data indexed by Google Desktop, security researchers said this week.

"This is really just fundamentally about how browsers work," he said. "If you allow a Web site to have access to your drive -- to modify to change things, to integrate or whatever -- you're relying on that Web site to be secure."

Hansen and Grossman say that Google is not the only company vulnerable to a growing category of Web-based attacks. For instance, MySpace.com was hit when a fast-moving worm spread through the MySpace community in early December, stealing MySpace log-in credentials and promoting adware Web sites.

"A lot of these new attack techniques are going to require the browsers to improve," Grossman said. "The users really have very little ability to protect themselves against these attacks" he said. "It's very bad. Even the experts are afraid to click on each other's links anymore."

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Robert McMillan Robert McMillan is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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