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Apr
1st

Shift happens

Author: Chewy | Files under Uncategorized

A year or two ago, most malware was spread via e-mail attachments, which resulted in mass outbreaks like Bagle, Mydoom and Warezov. Nowadays sending .EXE attachments in e-mail doesn’t work so well for the criminals because almost every company and organization is filtering out such risky attachments from their e-mail traffic.

The criminals’ new preferred way of spreading malware is by drive-by downloads on the Web. These attacks often still start with an e-mail spam run but the attachment in the e-mail has been replaced by a web link, which takes you to the malicious web site. So instead of getting infected over SMTP, you get infected over HTTP.

Infection by a drive-by download can happen automatically just by visiting a web site, unless you have a fully patched operating system, browser and browser plug-ins. Unfortunately, most people have some vulnerabilities in their systems. Infection can also take place when you are fooled into manually clicking on a download and running a program from the web page that contains the malware.

There are several methods criminals use to gather traffic to these websites. A common approach is to launch an e-mail spam campaign containing messages that tempt people to click on a link. Messages like “There is a video of you on YouTube”, or “You have received a greeting card”, or “Thank you for your order” have been popular baits.

Another method used by criminals is to create many web pages with thousands of different keywords which are indexed by Google, and then simply wait for people to visit these sites. So when you do a search for something innocuous like “knitting mittens” (as a random example), and click on a search result that looks just like all the others, you are actually getting your computer infected. Typically, an infection by an automatic exploit happens without you realizing it or seeing anything strange on the computer screen.

The third method of distributing malware involves the criminals hacking into existing high profile, high traffic web sites. Unlike the joke defacements that some hackers played on the front pages of prominent web sites in the past, today’s criminal hackers don’t change the front page at all. They simply insert a line of javascript on the front page which uses an exploit to infect your machine when you go there. Everything works and looks as normal.

korea times

This has happened to the web sites of some popular magazines which can have a million users every single day. People trust sites that are part of their daily routine, and they couldn’t suspect that anything bad could happen when they go there.

Another vector for drive-by downloads are infiltrated ad networks. We are seeing more and more advertising displayed on high-profile websites. By infiltrating the ad networks, the criminals don’t have to hack a site but their exploit code will still be shown to millions of users, often without the knowledge of the webmaster of those sites.

It is important to be aware of this shift from SMTP to HTTP infections, which can be exploited by the criminals in many ways. Companies often measure their risk of getting infected by looking at the amount of stopped attachments at their e-mail gateway. Those numbers are definitely going down, but the actual risk of getting infected probably isn’t.

Individuals and companies should therefore be scanning their web traffic for malware – as well as filtering their FTP traffic. In parallel to the switch from SMTP to HTTP as a way of spreading malware, we are now also seeing more and more malicious e-mails that link to malware via FTP links.

This report was an excerpt from our Quarterly Security Wrapup, which has been released today.

Download the full wrapup.

On 31/03/08 At 12:26 PM


Apr
1st

Shedding (Black)Light on the Master Boot Record

Author: Chewy | Files under Uncategorized

A while ago we blogged about the MBR rootkit, which has been getting attention from all the security vendors. We’re glad to inform you that the latest version of the F-Secure BlackLight standalone rootkit scanner now detects MBR rootkit infections.

BlackLight detecting MBR rootkit

BlackLight has stood the test of time ever since it was released in the beginning of 2005. A new rootkit technique that has been able to evade detection has been a very rare event. The MBR rootkit is quite different from other rootkits we’ve seen over the years, so we had to add completely new technology into BlackLight to detect it successfully.

You can download standalone BlackLight here.

On 31/03/08 At 01:47 PM


Apr
1st

Stormy April Fool’s Day

Author: Chewy | Files under Uncategorized

A wave of April Fool’s Day related Storm mails have just been sent out. Similar as the other times with a link that points to an IP address.


storm_april2008

When visiting the site you end up on a page like this:

storm_april2008

So far no exploit code on the page but that could change any second so if you receive one of these emails, don’t click on the link.

On 31/03/08 At 07:45 PM


Apr
1st

Unusual banking trojan found today

Author: Chewy | Files under Uncategorized

We’ve seen tons of banking trojans lately, but now we’ve run into something quite unique.

This new banking trojan was found today from a drive-by-download site. We’ve added detection for it as Win32.Pril.A

It not only infects the MBR of the machine, but also reflashes the boot code in the Flash BIOS, making disinfection problematic.

Once an infected machine is online, the trojan monitors the users actions, waiting him to go to go to one of several hundred online banks, located all over the world.

samplexml

Once the user has logged on, the banking trojan uses PCMCIA to inject code into the VGA! As an end result, the trojan creates a man-in-the-browser attack against the victim.

Now, the really surprising part is what the trojan does. Normal banking trojans would insert extra transactions or change the deposit account numbers on-the-fly. However, Win32.Pril.A doesn’t withdraw money from you - it actually inserts money TO your account. This looked so weird we had to test it several times, on all of our accounts.

The drive-by-download site is still up. Normally, we wouldn’t list the URL for such a site, or we would at least obfuscate it in a screenshot. However this time we’ll make an exception. We will even make the link clickable: http://aprilbanking.cjb.net/

On 01/04/08 At 07:22 AM