Business Standard

Expert raises hack scare alarm on RBI website

- ADVAIT RAO PALEPU

Asecurity researcher, going by the pseudonym ‘Ded Sec’ reported a cyber-security vulnerabil­ity on the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) website on Sunday morning. Ded Sec detected cross-site scripting that allows an attacker to execute malicious codes remotely on the RBI’s website. “This allows several opportunit­ies to attack, mostly by hijacking the user’s current or by changing the look of the page in order to steal the user's credential­s,” the researcher told Business Standard. Ded Sec, through a series of tweets, tried to get the attention of the Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) in New Delhi, the country’s nodal cyber security agency. They attempted to contact the RBI through Twitter and a contact form on the central bank’s website in order to report the vulnerabil­ity. Even after two days, “no answers came and the issue is not fixed yet,” the researcher said. On being contacted by Business Standard, the RBI ran a vulnerabil­ity check on its website. An official of the central bank said its informatio­n-technology team looked into the matter and had conducted vulnerabil­ity tests on the website to source the issue. But the spokespers­on did not deny the existence of such a potential security flaw. “Cross-site scripting is a common problem across many websites. We are ensuring this vulnerabil­ity, if at all, is taken care of,” said the spokespers­on. Cross-site scripting essentiall­y targets users of a particular applicatio­n or website, instead of the server. First, a hacker or attacker injects a malicious code into the trusted website of government organisati­on(s), for example. When a regular user visits the infected website, the browser is incapable of distinguis­hing the malicious parts of the code from the ‘trust-worthy’ elements. Taking advantage of that, the malicious script surreptiti­ously accesses users’ cookies, session tokens and other sensitive informatio­n such as ids and passwords of other sites, usually retained within the browser history. Cross-site scripting comprises roughly half of all cyber vulnerabil­ities tracked since 2012 by security agencies. “Since it allows attackers to hijack other users' sessions, an attacker might get access to an administra­tor computer and gain full control over the applicatio­ns,” the researcher said. Such a vulnerabil­ity could give a hacker access to important log-in details of important government employees and administra­tors, automatica­lly without the knowledge of either the user or website administra­tor. At the time of this article's publicatio­n, the security researcher did not find that the vulnerabil­ity was resolved.

 ??  ?? The researcher detected cross-site scripting that allows an attacker to execute malicious codes remotely on the RBI’s website
The researcher detected cross-site scripting that allows an attacker to execute malicious codes remotely on the RBI’s website

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