The company, Credit Card Billing LLC (CCBill) of Tempe, Ariz., reportedly advised its customers to change their passwords and search for bots called "eggdrop" that are designed to listen for instructions via an IRC channel, according to a Reuters report.
Once activated, the bots could swing into action, turning hacked Web servers into zombie-like drones that could be used to take down other Web sites.
Dayne Jordan, co-owner of CompleteWeb, a Columbus, Ohio-based ISP, was quoted as saying "The bots are sitting there and waiting. If someone comes into the channel and executes the right command these machines could be used to launch a huge distributed denial-of-service attack."
Alan Paller, research director of the System Networking, Administration and Security Institute, called the hack a "really bad infestation."
RELATED ARTICLES
Microsoft Posts "Critical" Windows XP Patch
RSA Unveils WEP Security Breakthrough
Is Data Security Bill Misguided?
Government Approves Encryption Standard
"Goner" E-mail Worm Rated Highest Risk
In addition to the bots that could be used to turn the Web servers into zombies, administrative user names and passwords of CCBill's Web site customers and user names and passwords of their customers may have been exposed, according to Jordan.
Jordan was quoted as saying that he informed CCBill of the problem Monday night after receiving a tip from someone else. Nearly 20 of his own customers had been hacked, all of them CCBill users, he said.
In its e-mail to customers, CCBill said it had corrected the source of the problem and was working to discover who was behind the hack.
The disclosure follows Thursday's report that Microsoft Corp. has posted a "critical" security patch for Windows XP.
LATEST NEWS
Cyber Monday: More Shoppers, Deeper Discounts
Microsoft-Yahoo Deal 'Fiction,' Report Says
Cell Phones More Distracting Than Passengers
The Social Side of Shopping
Bloggers on Front Lines in Mumbai Attacks




Digg
Del.icio.us
furl
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Tailrank
Technorati
Google Bookmarks
Yahoo Favorites
Windows Live
Ask
More stories by this author
