Security Firms
Bust Malware-for-Sale Racketeers
By John P. Mello Jr.
TechNewsWorld
04/20/06 8:27 AM PT
"It was a whole business model centered
around selling this type of software to criminals," Sam
Curry, vice president for product management for eTrust
Security Management said. "The malicious software was
created and sold to criminal organizations so they can
steal data. It's a lot different from the old days of
the virus writer wars of who can gain the most
notoriety," he added.
Making the Case for
Enterprise Mobility: Wireless Management
and Spend Control. Find out how AT&T was able to reduce
spiraling enterprise mobility costs and boost the
efficient use of assets.
A malware-for-sale ring used to
distribute customized copies of a data-pilfering Trojan
has been cracked by two computer security firms.
Panda
Software
of Glendale, Calif., and
RSA Security (Nasdaq: RSAS) of Bedford, Mass.,
"neutralized" several Web sites that were providing
information thieves with customized versions of the
Briz.A Trojan, according to Panda.
Panda
said it intercepted information pinched by the malware,
including "hundreds of user names and passwords for
banks, telecommunication companies, hotels, airlines and
international betting services.
Business Model for
Crime
"From
the FTP logs that we were able to see, which is where
information from infected PCs came streaming in, many,
many thousands of PCs were infected," Panda Chief
Technology Officer Patrick Hinojosa told
TechNewsWorld.
However, another security firm, Islandia, N.Y.-based
eTrust Security
Management, discounted the breadth of the
threat. "We have several samples of the Trojan, but we
haven't seen a particularly unusual outbreak, and we
haven't seen an unusual level of danger," Sam Curry,
vice president for product management, told
TechNewsWorld.
The
distribution of the malware was being handled like a
business, Hinojosa noted. The basic Trojan was being
sold for US$990. Then additional modules could be
purchased for tasks such as hacking servers to retrieve
stolen password information and compromising FTP sites
to store the ill-gotten gains.
Paradigm Shift
Panda
and RSA were able to shut down some malignant servers,
Hinojosa said, and have turned over the findings of
their forensic investigation to law enforcement
authorities in Russia and Eastern Europe. No arrests
have been made in the case as yet.
"It was
a whole business model centered around selling this type
of software to criminals. The malicious software was
created and sold to criminal organizations so they can
steal data," Hinojosa explained.
"It's a
lot different from the old days of the virus writer wars
of who can gain the most notoriety," he added. "Briz.A
is a whole paradigm shift in criminal activity on the
Web."
Popularized by Sony
What
makes this Trojan particularly pernicious is its use of
rootkit technology. "It uses rootkit technology to
inject these processes into a system so they stay
hidden, and it's almost impossible by using standard
methods to clean off a system," Hinojosa said. "It's a
piece of software designed to maximize ROI for the
criminal."
Stealth, not notoriety, is the main selling point for
this kind of software, he explained. "The people buying
it want it to remain running undetected because they're
making money off the captured data."
Rootkits were a relatively esoteric technique to hide
malware until one large entertainment company created a
hornet's nest of controversy by using one in its digital
rights management scheme, according to David M. Perry,
global director of education for TrendMicro, an
antivirus software maker in Cupertino, Calif.
"All
the publicity that
Sony (NYSE: SNE) got promoted the idea of rootkits
among the malware community," he told TechNewsWorld.
Romulan Stealth Drive
"We
refer to a rootkit as the Romulan Stealth Drive for a
virus, Trojan or worm," Perry said. "What the rootkit
does is, it makes it almost impossible to detect itself
and the malware that it's protecting."
What
makes rootkits so difficult to detect is that they
control fundamental tasks performed by a computer's
operating system.
Whenever an antivirus program is ready to scan a file
with a rootkit in it, the rootkit, which has control of
the system, instructs the program to skip the file or
tells the scanner it's something it's not -- like
Windows notepad, TrendMicro Senior Anti-Virus Researcher
Bruce Hughes explained to TechNewsWorld.
"Rootkits
are going to be the leading kind of malware by about
September," Perry predicted.
|