By Joris Evers
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: March 30, 2006, 6:04 PM PST
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Cybercrooks are spamming e-mail messages to trick people into visiting malicious Web sites that exploit a recent Internet Explorer flaw, experts warned Thursday.
The Web sites take advantage of the vulnerability in the omnipresent Microsoft Web browser to install a keystroke logger on vulnerable computers, according to San Diego-based Websense Security Labs.
"This keylogger monitors activity on various financial Web sites and uploads captured information back to the attacker," Websense said in an alert. The malicious software could capture log-in names and passwords for the sites, information criminals could sell or possibly use to plunder a victim's account.
The e-mail messages used to lure people to the Web sites contain excerpts from BBC news stories and offer a link to "read more," Websense said. This link leads to a forged BBC Web page where the malicious software is dropped onto a vulnerable PC by exploiting the "createTextRange()" vulnerability in IE, according to Websense's alert.
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