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Firesheep brings session hijacking to the masses
A years-old vulnerability has been brought into the limelight by an open source FireFox extension which makes it extremely easy to hijack sessions belonging to other Web users on shared networks.
Eric Butler's Firesheep tool makes it remarkably simple for novices to hijack sessions on several social networking sites. Firesheep monitors network traffic and detects when someone visits a website which transmits unencrypted session cookies. The victim's name and photo is displayed by the tool, and double-clicking on that person instantly logs you in as them.
Even though these session hijacking vulnerabilities have been possible for many years, the sheer user friendliness of this new tool is causing a storm of comments on Twitter. No specialist hacking knowledge is required to use the tool – all you need is to be on the same network as your victim. Sending unencrypted data over open WiFi networks has always posed a security risk, and the release of this new tool greatly increases the likelihood of exploitation.
Online banking services typically employ HTTPS throughout an entire session, keeping the session cookies encrypted and thus hidden from eavesdroppers. Due to the computational overheads of providing HTTPS connections, many other websites reserve this secure protocol only for transmitting login credentials, after which the user would continue to use the website over an unencrypted HTTP connection. This is the weakness which allows Firesheep to work, as it makes the session cookies vulnerable to eavesdropping. This type of vulnerability is commonly discovered during Netcraft's security tests, and Butler's new extension greatly simplifies the process of exploiting it on a range of popular sites.
In recent years, the computational overheads of HTTPS have become less significant due to the continual improvements in computer hardware, so more and more sites are beginning to adopt HTTPS for the entire lifetime of a user session. For instance, Google introduced an "always use HTTPS" option on their widely used Gmail service in 2008, before eventually making this the default setting at the start of 2010.
Butler announced Firesheep at the 12th ToorCon conference. The extension already allows session hijacking vulnerabilities to be exploited against 26 different sites, including Facebook, Flickr, Twitter and WordPress. Additional sites can be monitored simply by adding a new script to its existing list of handlers.
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October 2010 Web Server Survey
In the October 2010 survey we received responses from 232,839,963 sites.
Again this month Apache increased its market share by approximately 1 percentage point, gaining 5.5M hostnames, while Microsoft and Google lost 1.3M and 400k hostnames respectively. Microsoft's losses in Active Sites were much smaller, at just over 100k, while Google lost 150k.
While the other servers' gains were down this month, nginx saw a 1.4M increase in hostnames, bringing its market share up by nearly 0.5 percentage points. Notable growth includes a 400k increase in Moldova and a 700k increase in the US, which includes a 150k jump at BurstNet, a 200k jump at Hurricane Electric and an increase of nearly 400k at ServePath, LLC. If current trends continue nginx will overtake Google for number of hostnames by next month, however it trails Google in Active Sites by over 4M. nginx has not had a higher number of hostnames than Google since the heavy losses it sustained in February when a large number of stale blogs at wordpress.com and 163.com were expired from the survey.
lighttpd lost nearly 500k hostnames, a drop of almost 25%. This was largely due to losses at iWeb Technologies (300k) and in the Bahamas (200k).
Total Sites Across All Domains
August 1995 - October 2010
Market Share for Top Servers Across All Domains
August 1995 - October 2010
(more...)Developer September 2010 Percent October 2010 Percent Change Apache 129,782,948 57.12% 135,209,162 58.07% 0.95 Microsoft 54,787,167 24.11% 53,525,841 22.99% -1.12 Google 15,312,751 6.74% 14,971,028 6.43% -0.31 nginx 12,779,550 5.62% 14,130,907 6.07% 0.44 lighttpd 1,818,032 0.80% 1,380,160 0.59% -0.21 -
Most Reliable Hosting Company Sites in September 2010
Rank Company site OS Outage
hh:mm:ssFailed
Req%DNS Connect First
byteTotal 1 Datapipe FreeBSD 0:00:00 0.019 0.052 0.015 0.031 0.041 2 www.netcetera.co.uk Windows Server 2008 0:00:00 0.019 0.046 0.051 0.104 0.209 3 Virtual Internet Linux 0:00:00 0.019 0.202 0.054 0.113 0.369 4 INetU FreeBSD 0:00:00 0.027 0.120 0.067 0.167 0.397 5 New York Internet FreeBSD 0:00:00 0.027 0.139 0.069 0.145 0.359 6 www.qubenet.net Linux 0:00:00 0.031 0.082 0.040 0.083 0.331 7 www.codero.com Linux 0:00:00 0.035 0.539 0.104 0.419 0.853 8 www.uk2.net Linux 0:00:00 0.054 0.133 0.049 0.103 0.263 9 www.cwcs.co.uk Linux 0:00:00 0.066 0.168 0.256 0.556 0.796 10 www.dinahosting.com Linux 0:00:00 0.070 0.088 0.099 0.199 0.199 All of the top three hosting company web sites this month had the same number of failed requests - five each. The top three hosting companies are therefore ranked based on performance and the average connection times to their sites.
Datapipe was the best performing hosting company in September 2010. Datapipe has datacentres in the U.S., the U.K. and China. The company has a strong sustainability policy and powers two of its American datacentres using renewable energy. Datapipe has consistently performed well, having been in the top ten every month since last November.
This month's second best performing hoster was UK-based Netcetera. Netcetera was founded in 1996 and provides co-location, dedicated servers and managed hosting.
The third best performing this month was Virtual Internet, also a UK-based hoster founded in 1996. The company primarily provides managed hosting services, focusing on high availability and resilience.
Six of the top ten hosting company web sites this month are running Linux.
Netcraft measures and makes available the response times of around forty leading hosting providers' sites. The performance measurements are made at fifteen minute intervals from separate points around the internet, and averages are calculated over the immediately preceding 24 hour period.
From a customer's point of view, the percentage of failed requests is more pertinent than outages on hosting companies' own sites, as this gives a pointer to reliability of routing, and this is why we choose to rank our table by fewest failed requests, rather than shortest periods of outage.
Information on the measurement process and current measurements is available.
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Twitter users fall victim to new XSS worm
Earlier this morning, an Australian teenager discovered a new cross-site scripting vulnerability on twitter.com. Just a couple of hours later, hackers used the same flaw to launch a massive XSS worm attack against Twitter users.
By posting specially crafted tweets, zzap noticed he could get other Twitter users to execute arbitrary JavaScript whenever they moved the mouse cursor over the affected messages.

zzap appears to have discovered the vulnerability shortly after seeing RainbowTwtr's colourful use of CSS injection to display the colours of the rainbow.
Using a similar technique, zzap was able to inject an
onmouseoverattribute containing arbitrary JavaScript. This was first demonstrated with an "uh oh" message, which zzap recognised as an XSS vulnerability.
zzap (jokingly?) suggested that nobody should tell the 4chan forum about the XSS vulnerability; however, some other users have already started Rickrolling other users by tweeting Rick Astley lyrics in pop-up JavaScript alert messages. It is feasible for much larger JavaScript payloads to be loaded from external websites, which could allow complex cross-site request forgery attacks (CSRF) against authenticated Twitter users.
zzap later demonstrated that it was possible to steal cookies from Twitter users, by displaying the contents in another pop-up message. This could be mitigated to some extent if Twitter used the HttpOnly attribute for their cookies — this would prevent injected scripts from being able to directly access the
document.cookievalue.Although the XSS exploits demonstrated by zzap were mostly harmless, some users were nonetheless baffled by the unexpected behaviour and concluded that Twitter had been hacked:
zzap told another Twitter user that the flaw could be used to steal account information, while one of his other examples made the obvious point:

Rather impressively (and also unfortunately), it took less than 2 hours for hackers to exploit this vulnerability in a wide scale fashion. Many users have already been targeted by scripts which attempt to propagate in a worm-like fashion, or load larger JavaScript payloads from external locations.
Searching Twitter for "onmouseover" shows many of the different attack vectors currently being exploited and propagated:
The vulnerability is still present right now, but John Adams at Twitter Security responded to Netcraft within just a few minutes to say they are looking into it.
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September 2010 Web Server Survey
In the September 2010 survey we received responses from 227,225,642 sites.
This month saw the number of responses to our survey increase by nearly 14M sites and a change in web server market share similar to last month's, with Apache continuing to gain at Microsoft and Google's expense. Notable increases include a 1.5M gain in hostnames for Servage, an almost 700% increase over last month, and gains of around 500k hostnames at ThePlanet.com, SAVVIS and GoDaddy.
Apache experienced a smaller jump in market share this month compared with last despite gaining more hostnames, with an increase of just over 10M. This growth was fairly widely spread across a variety of hosters and it boosted Apache's market share by another percentage point.
Microsoft gained over a million hostnames but it was not enough to prevent a loss of nearly 1 percentage point of market share.
lighttpd's large gains in August were not repeated this month and instead saw a slight drop in hostnames and market share.
nginx also gained 1M hostnames, but with little effect on its market share. nginx continues its slow but steady rise in market share amongst the Million busiest sites. Over the last two years nginx has risen from just under 20k sites to nearly 55k, while Microsoft has lost the same number of sites.
Total Sites Across All Domains
August 1995 - September 2010
Market Share for Top Servers Across All Domains
August 1995 - September 2010
(more...)Developer August 2010 Percent September 2010 Percent Change Apache 119,664,128 56.06% 129,782,948 57.12% 1.06 Microsoft 53,434,586 25.03% 54,787,167 24.11% -0.92 Google 15,526,781 7.27% 15,312,751 6.74% -0.53 nginx 11,713,607 5.49% 12,779,550 5.62% 0.14 lighttpd 1,821,824 0.85% 1,818,032 0.80% -0.05 -
Most Reliable Hosting Company Sites in August 2010
Rank Company site OS Outage
hh:mm:ssFailed
Req%DNS Connect First
byteTotal 1 Rackspace Linux 0:00:00 0.026 0.057 0.042 0.084 0.084 2 New York Internet FreeBSD 0:00:00 0.026 0.163 0.047 0.105 0.257 3 Virtual Internet Linux 0:00:00 0.026 0.250 0.111 0.379 0.692 4 One.com Linux 0:00:00 0.030 0.218 0.085 0.170 0.170 5 www.qubenet.net Linux 0:00:00 0.030 0.135 0.104 0.214 0.757 6 www.uk2.net Linux 0:00:00 0.037 0.247 0.114 0.232 0.605 7 www.peer1.com Linux 0:00:00 0.041 0.225 0.010 0.028 0.071 8 www.serverbeach.com Linux 0:00:00 0.041 0.163 0.010 0.070 0.104 9 Datapipe FreeBSD 0:00:00 0.041 0.179 0.034 0.070 0.102 10 iWeb Technologies Linux 0:00:00 0.041 0.164 0.100 0.201 0.201 Rackspace was the most reliable hosting company in August 2010. Rackspace, which has data centres across the U.S., U.K. and Hong Kong, has recently expanded their UK headquarters in Middlesex, to cater for EMEA based customers.
Last month's most reliable hosting company, New York Internet, comes in at second place this month. New York Internet host part of the FreeBSD Project's infrastructure at their recently opened data centre based in Bridgewater, New Jersey.
This month's third most reliable hosting company is U.K. based Virtual Internet with data centres present in Manchester and London. Fourth is low-cost shared hosting provider One.com and fifth is Qube Managed Services Limited with data centres based in London, New York and Zurich.
In the top 10 this month, all but 2 companies run Linux and there was an average of 0.03% failed requests to their sites from our performance collectors.
Netcraft measures and makes available the response times of around forty leading hosting providers' sites. The performance measurements are made at fifteen minute intervals from separate points around the internet, and averages are calculated over the immediately preceding 24 hour period.
From a customer's point of view, the percentage of failed requests is more pertinent than outages on hosting companies' own sites, as this gives a pointer to reliability of routing, and this is why we choose to rank our table by fewest failed requests, rather than shortest periods of outage.
Information on the measurement process and current measurements is available.
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