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Old 24-04-2007, 17:47
ChrisMcQuillan ChrisMcQuillan is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Eidolon View Post
It would be worth running an antivirus scan on your computer to ensure that there isn't any keylogging software installed which could allow hackers to discover your login/FTP details. Also it would be worth checking the website hosting affected for any files which could be used by hackers to gain entry to the website hosting. If other website hostings aren't affected then I'm inclined to think that the hackers have found away into your website hosting rather than the server.
The only problem with this is that I was receiving identical injections. I even changed all my FTP logins that could have been responsible and it happened again. Hence I'm inclined to think its a server issue.

My dad (also a webmaster) had a similar problem on a different host a couple of years back. It was always his index.php/html that got targetted. Thus I think its a script targetting index/other crucial files.

He eventually countered the problem using 444 permissions, but this doesn't render the server any more secure unforunately.
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