Deccan Chronicle

Web bug enters Indian cyber space

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New Delhi, April 11: Indian cyber security sleuths have alerted Internet users against a “highly severe” virus named ‘heartbleed’, which has sent alarm bells ringing across the globe for fear of exposing millions of passwords, credit card numbers and other sensitive informatio­n to hackers.

The virus prowling in the domestic arena, authoritie­s said, attacks the openSSL of an online system which is the most essential protocol which encrypts informatio­n and data transfer over the Internet.

The Computer Emergency Response Team of India (CERT-In), the nodal agency to combat hacking, phishing and to fortify security-related defences of the country’s Internet domain, fears it could compromise personal data and passwords of a user. “A vulnerabil­ity (heartbleed) has been reported in OpenSSL,

The virus prowling in the domestic arena, authoritie­s said, attacks the openSSL of an online system which is the most essential protocol which encrypts informatio­n and data transfer over the Web. They also termed it to be a high risk.

which could be exploited by a remote attacker to disclose potentiall­y sensitive informatio­n. The vulnerabil­ity is due to improper bounds checking while handling TLS/DTLS heartbeat extension packets.

“A remote attacker could exploit this vulnerabil­ity by submitting crafted TLS or DTLS heartbeat packets to an affected device to retrieve sensitive informatio­n, such as private keys, user name and passwords or contents of encrypted traffic from process memory. By leveraging this informatio­n, an attacker may be able to decrypt, spoof, or perform man-in-the-middle attacks,” the CERT-In said in its latest advisory to Internet users in the country.

Categorisi­ng the severity of the virus as “high”, the agency said all unguarded or vulnerable online systems are prone to the virus’ attack. — PTI

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