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Microsoft anti-phishing software raises Internet privacy concerns
By Mike Ingram
17 September 2005
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A phishing filter developed by Microsoft and to be included
in the next release of the Windows operating system has raised
concern amongst privacy advocates.
The filter software is to be included in Internet Explorer
7 but has been released early as an extension to existing versions
of the Windows web browser.
Phishing is the term given to the use of fake web sites in
order to steal the identities of users. Phishing fraud normally
starts with computer users receiving emails appearing to be from
banks, credit card companies, or sites such as eBay and PayPal,
requesting account updates. Links are provided to web sites that
seem legitimate but in fact store the information, to be used
for illegal activity. Unwary users are duped into giving up their
Social Security, credit card and bank account information.
The increase in phishing attacks has prompted a new genre of
software known as anti-phishing tools. Most of these come as extensions
to the web browser, most commonly Internet Explorer. Two such
tools are CallingID, and SpoofGuard from Dan Boneh and John Mitchell
of the Stanford Security Lab. Netcraft also provides a toolbar
for Internet Explorer and Firefox, which assists users in identifying
phishing sites.
Anti-phishing software uses a combination of different methods
in an attempt to spot spoof sites. Domain analysis is used to
verify domain registrations using a number of criteria and from
a number of sources. Session analysis is used to determine if
a site uses properly encrypted communications and spot other telltale
signs of a spoof site. Most of these programs are known as client-side,
in that they operate on the users own computer without sending
data to a server.
Microsofts anti-phishing software is controversial in
that it sends a users browsing activity to Microsoft servers
for comparison against lists of sites know to be either good or
bad. According to the Microsoft web site:
Phishing Filter is a feature in Internet Explorer 7.0
that helps determine whether a Web site is legitimate or a so-called
phishing Web site. Internet Explorer 7.0 is only available
to a select group of developers and is not expected for general
release within the next year. The phishing filter software is
to be made available as an extension to existing versions of Internet
Explorer over the next few weeks. The web site specifies three
checks designed to help protect users from phishing scams:
1. It compares the addresses of web sites that a user
attempts to visit to the addresses of sites that have been reported
as legitimate. This list is stored on the users computer.
2. It analyzes sites that a user attempts to visit by
checking those sites for characteristics common to phishing sites.
3. If the user chooses, Phishing Filter sends the addresses
of web sites that a user attempts to visit to Microsoft to be
checked against a frequently updated list of reported phishing
sites.
It is this last point that has come in for the most criticism.
Privacy campaigners argue that this allows Microsoft to track
Internet use. Kevin Bankston, a lawyer and Internet privacy expert
with the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation, has
said this is potentially a wholesale handing over of ones
privacy to Microsoft. I would say, right now, definitely dont
use this. If youre careful, you dont need this.
As the software becomes integrated into the next generation
of Microsoft Windows, however, users will have little option but
to use it. While the sending of information to Microsoft is optional,
many users will not realize the significance of what they are
doing.
The problem of Internet security is a serious one, which needs
to be addressed at many levels. Technology can assist in this
and some of the new client-side anti-phishing software does seem
to be effective. In the case of Microsofts server based
solution, however, too many questions arise for this to be considered
a legitimate response to the problem.
Microsoft has, of course, insisted that it has no intention
of tracking a users web browsing activity and says it does
not store the information sent by the phishing filter. We
dont store that information, Greg Sullivan, Microsoft
Windows group product manager, said. There is no server
event log, no data base, no hosted event file.
Kevin Bankston told the Australian publication the Age
that the information may be too valuable for Microsoft to ignore
in the longer term. There are clear financial imperatives
for them to choose to make use of this information in the future
and start logging it, he said. It is not hard to imagine
the gold that could be mined out of that information.
In fact, decisions as to the retention of such information
may not be left to Microsoft at all. In the aftermath of the terrorist
attacks of September 11, 2001, and those in London in July this
year, there have been increasing demands by security forces internationally
for broader access to electronic data and for Internet Service
Providers to be required to log certain data.
There is also a question of the freedom of the Internet as
a means of mass dissemination of information, open to all. Microsoft
proposes to maintain a white list of sites deemed
legitimate. Officials say the list of approved sites, which Microsoft
calls the list of highly trafficked legitimate web sites,
will number in the tens of thousands. The list is
being provided by Nielsen NetRatings, which measures Internet
traffic. ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names And
Numbers, reported in August that there are 43 million active registered
domain names worldwide, meaning that only a tiny percentage of
sites will make it to the Microsoft list.
Michael Aldridge, a product planner with Microsofts technology
care and safety group, told the Age the company would not
be vetting which web sites are contained on the list. It
is based ... purely on traffic. We make no judgments on content.
For inexperienced users, the prospect of error messages to
the effect that their identity may be stolen if they proceed to
a selected site could prove intimidating enough to have them avoid
the site all together. There is a very real danger that the phishing
filter will have the effect of creating a two-tier Internet, with
sites designated as safe or not, supposedly on the basis of the
number of people visiting them on a list controlled by the worlds
largest software corporation.
See Also:
European antitrust
case finds against Microsoft
[31 March 2004]
A glimpse behind
the veil of business secrets
Microsoft lawsuit reveals predatory corporate practices
[23 May 2000]
The Microsoft lawsuit,
software development and the capitalist market
[2 May 2000]
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