Porn sites hit by malware hidden in adverts Published duration 25 September 2015

image copyright Malwarebytes image caption Once a device is infected with ransomware, a false but often intimidating message appears on-screen

Security firm Malwarebytes says a campaign of malware hidden inside online ads which hit search engine Yahoo earlier this year has now also appeared on adult websites.

The advertising, apparently for a service called Sex Messenger, also contained tools for identifying whether the user was genuine rather than a bot.

It appeared on porn site xhamster, one of the world's most visited domains.

However the firm said porn sites are no more dangerous than mainstream ones.

The ad has now been removed.

The malware, which also made use of the security of cloud-based platforms to hide what it was doing, worked by directing the user to a fraudulent page once it had determined that they were running Microsoft's Internet Explorer and had identified the device's security settings.

So-called "malvertising" often installs ransomware on to a victim's machine. It loads a page containing false accusations of criminal activity and instructions for paying a fine.

"These efforts ensure that only real users will get to see the exploit kit landing page therefore excluding honeypots and security researchers alike," wrote Malwarebytes security consultant Jerome Segura in a blog post.

Although in this case the ad was popping up so often that researchers were able to study it after all.

Xhamster is currently ranked the 71st most visited website in the world by web analytics firm Alexa and attracts hundreds of millions of monthly users.

But the online porn industry does invest in security, Mr Segura added.

"There's this idea that adult sites are more dangerous to visit than 'regular' sites," he told Tech Week Europe

"I don't believe it's entirely true especially for the top sites because they do dedicate a lot of resources to fighting fraud and malware.

"Based on what we have seen in the past months as far as malvertising goes, we have seen just as many top mainstream publishers as pornographic ones."

The firm that distributed the ad has now taken it down.