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Testing Microsoft Security Essentials and the Hosts file

posted onOctober 25, 2009
by hitbsecnews

Computers on the Internet address each other with numbers. What appears as computerworld.com to a human being is 65.221.110.98 to a computer. The system that translates between names and the underlying numbers (really IP addresses) is called DNS and it works very well. Too well, for some bad guys.

Many years ago, before the Internet, the translation between computer names and numbers was done by a file on each computer called the "hosts" file. Needless to say, as the number of computers got large, maintaining a hosts file on every computer became unrealistic. Now, when a computer is called on to reference another computer by name, it first makes a call into the DNS system to retrieve the underlying IP address.

Why the history lesson? Microsoft never retired the hosts file* and bad guys abuse it.

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