Fake Flash update leads to malicious add-ons

Fake Flash update notifications are old news, but users still fall for the trick.

In the latest example unearthed by Zscaler’s Julien Sobrier, one such notification delivers bogus browser extensions currently misused to make the author some money.

The page serving the notification is one that ostensibly belongs to a free adult site:

Depending on the detected browser, the visitor is served with the appropriate extension file for it: .XPI for Firefox, .CRX for Google Chrome, and .EXE for Internet Explorer.

“Browser extensions have a fairly simple structure,” explains Sobrier. “They don’t generally contain any malicious code directly, rather, when the browser starts, the add-on fetches the malicious JavaScript code from an external server and executes it.”

And that is what makes then so difficult to spot by AV solutions. In this particular case, the Firefox and Chrome extensions are not detected by one single AV solution used by VirusTotal.

Luckily for the users who have installed one of them, the extensions currently simply inject an invisible iframe in each new page that is loaded.

“The iframe contains advertising from resultsz.com, and contains a username in the URL. This tells me that the adware author gets money for the traffic sent to this site, even if the infected user cannot actually see what is being loaded,” says Sobrier, but points out that the remote file can be changed at any moment, allowing the author to steal cookies, login credentials, and more.

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