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'Malvertising' targets U.S. military firms in new twist on old web threat
An illustration picture shows a projection of text on the face of a woman in Berlin, June 12, 2013. REUTERS/Pawel Kopczynski · Reuters

By Eric Auchard

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - A surge in malware disguised as online advertisements aimed at unsuspecting web users has hit major U.S. military contractors in the past few weeks, marking a dangerous twist on a decade-old scourge for advertisers, security researchers said on Thursday.

Researchers from Fairfax, Virginia-based security software company Invincea said they had documented new uses of so-called "malvertising" to carry out highly-targeted cyber espionage campaigns against three firms in the military-industrial arena.

Malvertisements lurk behind banner ads and videos, delivering hidden code via ad networks to consumers and business users browsing the web. They exploit the automated dance that takes place in the blink of an eye between advertisements and web pages, every time a user lands on an ad-supported web site.

Data security breaches now regularly hit high-profile businesses such as banks and retailers, leaving millions of consumers vulnerable to identity theft and financial fraud. But research into malvertising has revealed how cyber-criminals and spies can use the marketing industry's latest tools to pinpoint high-value targets.

Invincea researchers said the goal of the intrusions appeared to be the theft of military secrets or intellectual property rather than click-fraud or bank account phishing. They noted that some of these companies are producing technology for use in combat zones.

"In the past, we have seen organized cyber crime learn attack techniques from advanced nation state actors," Invincea Chief Executive Anup Ghosh said, using industry parlance for cyber spies. "This is a case where advanced state actors would be learning from cyber crime in terms of methods and tactics."

Invincea researchers said that in the last two weeks of September they had detected up to six malvertising attacks that targeted one aerospace contractor and saw similar attacks against two other military contractors.

They declined to speculate on who or where these specific cyber-attacks originated, focusing instead on how they worked.

What is clear is that perpetrators are turning to the demographic targeting tools available to any online marketer, taking advantage of real-time advertising bidding networks, which work like stock exchanges for marketers, to place malware-laced ads that target specific organizations or audiences.

Invincea said they thwarted the attacks but declined to name the targeted firms. It will provide forensic evidence in a report it plans to publish on its website at http://www.invincea.com/ on Friday.