Saturday, May 7, 2011

Syrian Government Trying To Swipe Social Networking Passwords?

You may recall reports a few months ago from Tunisia, that indicated the government there had used a form of a man-in-the-middle attack to get usenames and passwords and access Facebook accounts of certain political opponents. It appears that Syria is trying to do the same thing. Reports have come out that Syria, via the Syrian Telecom Ministry, has kicked off a large man-in-the middle-attack on the HTTPS version of Facebook's site. While the EFF notes that the attack is amateurish, that doesn't mean it won't snare a potentially large number of people:
The attack is not extremely sophisticated: the certificate is invalid in user's browsers, and raises a security warning. Unfortunately, because users see these warnings for many operational reasons that are not actual man-in-the-middle attacks, they have often learned to click through them reflexively. In this instance, doing so would allow the attackers access to and control of their Facebook account. The security warning is users' only line of defense.
Either way, I'm a bit surprised that governments are using and promoting such ineffective means of spying on the populace. Of course, hopefully, this helps teach people to not just click through potential warnings, but also to get a better sense of how to keep their own computers secure and how to avoid such attacks.

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