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Wednesday 17 December 2008

Millions warned not to use Internet Explorer after Chinese fraudsters use security flaw to hijack computers

Millions of internet users are threatened by a flaw that can allow criminals access to personal and bank details.

A major security fault has been discovered in Microsoft's Internet Explorer web browser, which is used by 70 per cent of all computers. Around two million computer users are believed to have fallen victim after visiting apparently safe websites - and the problem threatens to sweep the worldwide web.

Due to the flaw, 'Trojan horse' viruses can be injected into the software of millions of computers, allowing criminals to remotely access and operate them.

Hackers in China are at the centre of the cyber attack, which is the most serious in the history of Microsoft's operating system. As many as 10,000 websites have already been compromised, according to anti-virus software producer Trend Micro. The problem is that Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser - used by 1billion people worldwide - has a basic flaw in a core component which allows it to read data from a web page.

Hackers have found a sequence of HTML codes - the computer language used to create websites - which exploits that flaw, causing Internet Explorer to crash.

This can trigger a malicious program installed by the hackers that can give them access to a computer without the owner realising.

Source: Daily Mail