MAY 22, 2008 | 4:10 PM
By Kelly Jackson Higgins
Senior Editor, Dark Reading
Google is now sharing details on why its automatic search deems certain Websites risky.
The search giant this month quietly added a new, free service called the Safe Browsing Diagnostic Page
that tells whether a site flagged by Google as potentially dangerous is
hosting malware, or helps distribute malware, for instance.
Google’s new diagnostics service provides information about any
bad behavior by the site within the past 90 days. The idea is to give
owners of the compromised Websites more information to assist in their
remediation and cleanup of the site, and to provide users more
information on why the site has been flagged.
The search giant’s automatic flagging of potentially risky
Websites has been “highly accurate,†according to Niels Provos, senior
staff engineer for Google, but it wasn’t easy for Webmasters and users
to verify the results. “Attackers often use sophisticated obfuscation
techniques or inject malicious payloads only under certain conditions,â€
Provos wrote in the Google security blog.
“With that in mind, we've developed a Safe Browsing diagnostic page
that will provide detailed information about our automatic
investigations and findings.â€
"For users, this increases confidence in our findings. For
Webmasters, this information may assist them in cleaning up their
servers," Provos told Dark Reading.
Google’s new service got a nod of approval from security watchdog
Stopbadware.org for pulling back the covers on Google’s site-flagging
process. “We’d like to applaud Google for taking this step in greater
transparency. This new resource should help website owners in cleaning
and securing their sites faster, which will help protect even more
internet users,†Stopbadware.org’s Erica George wrote in the
organization’s blog yesterday.
Provos says the diagnostics page provides the current listing
status of a site, as well as whether the site or some of its pages had
been listed by Google in the past as dangerous. It also details what
occurred when Google analyzed the page, when it was detected to be
malicious, and what type of malware it contained, for example. Google
now also reveals whether the flagged site was serving malware to users,
or if it served as an intermediary for malware distribution. |