Billy Rios: Biting the Hand that Feeds You - Storing and Serving Malicous Content From Well Known Web Servers

Published: Jan. 9, 2006, 11:10 p.m.

Whats in a name? How do you know you should "trust" the content you are receiving? In today's World Wide Web, we place a lot of "trust" into domain names. For many, domain names help determine the whether a particular link or file should be trusted, or eyed with suspicion. Domain name trust has even made its way into security systems, considering many of the protections built into our browsers are based strictly on domain names! In this talk, we'll take a look at some simple ways to store and serve malicious content from some of the most popular servers on the Internet.

It's time we rethink the ways we've implemented one of our most treasured Web resources... web mail. We'll bite the hand that feeds us by abusing the very features that make web mail services so popular. We'll show you how to use popular web mail servers as a repository for malicious content and how to serve that content to those surfing the World Wide Web (no email address required!)."Billy Rios is a Senior researcher for VeriSign's Global Security Consulting Service. He has performed network, application, web-application, source-code, wireless, Internet, Intranet, and dial-up security reviews and penetration testing for numerous clients in the Fortune 500.