Free Tool Scans Sites For Threats

The tool, dubbed "LinkScanner" by Exploit Prevention Labs will compete with better-known site raters such as McAfee's SiteAdvisor.

July 20, 2006

2 Min Read
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A security start-up on Thursday unveiled a free tool that scans Web sites for malicious code and other exploits, giving users a chance to steer clear of dangerous URLs before they click on links.

The tool, dubbed "LinkScanner" by Exploit Prevention Labs, is the fruit of an earlier effort -- the Atlanta-based company's SocketShield -- and in later versions, will compete with better-known site raters such as McAfee's SiteAdvisor, Exploit's chief operating officer said Thursday.

"At some point, you'll be able to enter a search here and point it to a specific [search] engine, and we'll return pages with scan results," said Chris Weltzien.

SiteAdvisor, technology that security giant McAfee acquired in April, rates sites in search results posted by Google, Yahoo, and MSN, but uses a completely different methodology.

"SiteAdvisor is not immediate and not empirical," said Joe Chiarella, Exploit Prevention's product manager. "Its information is not necessarily very fresh; we're instantaneous."When a user enters a URL in LinkScanner, the tool scans the requested page for threats and exploits, then reports back on what it found. "I think it's most useful for checking out links people send you in e-mail, Weltzien said. "Even though you've told them not to, they still do."

However, the tool doesn't warn users of all potentially risky sites. Several sites tested by TechWeb that were identified by Firefox 2.0 Beta 1 as likely spoofed phishing URLs, were passed by LinkScanner.

"We're not going terribly deep into the site," admitted Chiarella. "There are number of ways you can crawl a site, and we're doing it relatively superficially." LinkScanner scans only the page entered, not any secondary pages or sites linked to from the URL. "We could go to the entire depth of the site, but that would take some time," said Chiarella. "People have about a 30 second wait tolerance."

In TechWeb's tests, LinkScanner took about 10 seconds to return its findings.

LinkScanner is based on an SDK for SocketShield, a stand-alone exploit interceptor that the company released in final form last month. It's also tied to the same intelligence network Exploit Prevention uses to feed data to SocketShield.The company wants to license the SDK to Web portals and sites so that others can add a LinkScanner-style tool to their domains, said Weltzien. "It would provide a real stickiness factor for portals," he said, if other sites gave users the option of pre-scanning a link to a third-party page.

LinkScanner is free to use, and will remain so, said Weltzien, since he hopes to convince users of the tool to upgrade to the $19.95-per-year SocketShield.

"There's a real need for users to look at emerging threats to unpatched machines," Weltzien said. "They need real-time protection against real-time threats."

LinkScanner can be accessed from here.

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