MoMusings

Random ramblings and musings about all things malware and related net-nasties...

Friday, 26 January 2007

Another Lottery Win!

Hot on the heels of my being informed that I'd won a BMW and 550,000 Euros, comes another e-mail telling me I've won another lottery. I must be the luckiest person alive!

This time, according to an e-mail I've just received, I've won '500,000 US Dollars' !

Hang on, this is a lottery that is allegedly sponsored by the United Nations, I didn't know they were even in the lottery business? Yet again I don't remember entering any lottery!

Here are a couple of screenshots, showing the whole e-mail in all its glory:




Looks very professional and believable doesn't it?

However, it seems that the United Nations are also so short of money that they can't afford their own e-mail system and have to rely on AOL accounts too. If so then why are they running this lottery and giving me 500,000 US Dollars, surely that money would pay for a 'real' e-mail system? ;-)

Just to make it crystal clear, this is a scam, there is no money, and I haven't really won anything....Again!

I'm sure that the United Nations will be delighted to know their name is being used to help make a scam [in this case it is an Advance-Fee Fraud also known as a 419 or Nigerian scam] more believable?

Oh, and have any of you reading this ever met or known someone with a first name of 'Happy' or 'Stillwant', I mean they cannot be serious, can they?

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Thursday, 25 January 2007

Paper Selected For The EICAR 2007 Conference

EICAR have informed me that my abstract has been selected for the EICAR 2007 conference to be held in Budapest, Hungary between the 3rd and the 8th of May.

The abstract for the paper appears below:

The increasing speed of new malware strains being written and released means that security professionals are more likely than ever before to see new malware.


This means new malware which is not detected by the anti-malware solutions they have deployed in their infrastructure, be it workstation, server, PDA or at the gateway.

Imagine this scenario: An end-user calls the helpdesk and reports that their system is running very sluggishly when it wasn't a week ago and that they can't access the Windows 'Task Manager' or open a command prompt any more.

Is this caused by malware or is it a 'user' problem? The virus scanner is right up to date and active, and it says the system is clean, the personal firewall is active too. Where do you go from here? Investigate or rebuild the box?

How can you tell if the machine is clean or infected by a new malware, with a reasonable level of confidence for your conclusion?

This paper will look at what tricks, tools and techniques you can use to help establish the true state of the 'suspect' system. It will focus on a step by step approach of what tools to use, what to look for and what to do with any suspicious files. It will also discuss the use of forensic tools in such a scenario, as a last port of call.

The paper will draw on real scenarios where new [undetected] malware has been responsible for 'odd' system or network behaviour.

All I have to do now, is carry out all the required research and write the paper; should only take me about 3 months. However, as usual they need the completed paper by the 17th of March!

I've several other ideas for abstracts already sketched out ready for to submit for this years Virus Bulletin conference. Any topics that you think should be covered are most welcome, just drop me a note or leave a comment.

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Wednesday, 24 January 2007

I've Won a BMW Car and 550,000 Euros...

Wow, must be my lucky day (again), according to an e-mail I've just received, I've won '550,000 Euros and a new BMW Car' !

Hang on, this is a lottery that is allegedly sponsored by BMW, I don't drive [maybe it is time to learn as they are giving me a free car?], and yet again I don't remember entering any lottery!

Here are a couple of screenshots, showing the whole e-mail in all its glory:




Are BMW really that hard up that they can't afford their own e-mail system and have to rely on AOL? No, of course they are not, this is a scam.

Just to make it crystal clear, this is a scam, there is no money, and I haven't really won anything....Damn, I suppose I better cancel that order for those new guitars now? ;-)

Blimey, they are using a picture of some poor unsuspecting guy to try and give more credence to the e-mail. In this case they have used an image from www.rotary.org and the picture is of the president [Carl-Wilhelm Stenhammer] of that society.

I'm sure he will be delighted to know that a picture of him is being used to help make a scam [in this case it is an Advance-Fee Fraud also known as a 419 or Nigerian scam] more believable?

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Tuesday, 23 January 2007

December 2006 Malware Review

Here you go, the final Monthly Malware Review for 2006...

Not only has December come and gone, but also 2006 has run its course. However some things don't change, it has been another very busy month for me. On the malware and related security threats front it has been an interesting month with the re-appearance of mass-mailing malware, somewhat of a rarity in 2006, but more on that later.

Like previous months, I will cover some statistics from my own sensors and compare those against those from a couple of major anti-virus companies, and finally I will cover new and interesting things that occurred during the month.

I have created some graphs and performed some trend analysis from the raw data from my WormCharmer and Bayesian filter.

I have included four sources of information for the graphs and pie-charts, these are:

The last two are my own projects and all data is from the Internet, these systems are running on an aDSL link and are personal research projects that have been running for some time; WormCharmer 4 years, Malware Bayesian Filter 3 years.

In total I captured 711 samples during December, which have been catalogued as 36 distinct families and variants. In comparison during November I captured 1280 samples which were catalogued as 51 distinct families/variants. As you can see the captures in December are down from Novembers high.

During December I captured and submitted 2 brand new malware strains/variants [unknown to all or most AV companies at the time of submission].

As you can clearly see December was significantly down from the relative high of November. The December statistics show that the general trend is still downwards. The main reason for this downward trend is that the malware authors are using other methods to initially seed their offspring, such as Instant Messaging and e-mail using links instead of attachments, and where attachments are used these tend to be droppers or downloaders which are crafted to evade anti-virus tools. This trend which started as a trickle at the start of the year is now a torrent. This means that real e-mail worms which use attachments are fast becoming an endangered species of malware.

During December I reported over 500 new Phishing sites which are now included in the Netcraft phishing site database used by the Netcraft anti-phishing toolbar which I blogged about some time ago.

The first pie chart below shows the Top 10 distinct malware by percentage. Let us look at this in more detail:



W32/Tenga.3666 [Frisk] yet again retained the pole position during December. However, it has lost ground once more, as we also saw in October, its percentage has decreased from over 75 percent in November to just over 48.5 percent in December. Once again, Tenga.3666 seems very intent in keeping pole position for itself, although it has had stiff competition during December.

Netsky.P [aka Netsky.q] has disappeared from the chart in December, however, we have two other members of the Netsky family [Netsky.d] came into Novembers chart in seventh place and has risen to third place, and Netsky.c is in to the top ten taking the seventh place held by Netsky.d in November.

The share-crawling worms which suffered a decrease in their numbers from seven of the ten slots in August to just four in September, October and November, have managed to retain the four places again in December. The four are: Tenga.3666 in pole, Opaserv.worm.ae in sixth [up from eighth], Opaserv.worm.ai in eighth [up from ninth] and Opaserv.worm.d [a re-entry] in ninth.

IRC.Zapchast is back in the top ten in December, in fifth spot.

We have just two new entries in December's chart, these being Win32.Tibs.jy, straight in to the chart in second place and Sality.AD in fourth place.

Warezov fared badly in December, down from three variants in the top ten in November to just one, Warezov.fh being the only survivor of its family, just hanging on in tenth.

If you compare the above to the data from Kaspersky and also the data from SOPHOS you may see some marked differences. Why? Well, simply my sample capture systems collect data from multiple 'vectors' and combine the data, so I tend to get a more rounded picture of what is really running round the Internet in the way of net nasties.

As you can see the top 10 from Kaspersky [below] December has seen the Mytob family lose more ground, down from its modest comeback in November grabbing two places then, to just one in December. The only survivor of the Mytob clan is Mytob.c in seventh place.

In November Netsky.q slipped down to seventh, but managed to climb up two places to fifth spot in December. It is joined by two other family members, these being: Netsky.t, in fourth [same as in November] and Netsky.aa in eighth place up from ninth.

Pole position in December has been stormed by Warezov.fb [a new entry] with November pole position sitter, Warezov.gj falling out of the top ten. However, we have two new members of the Warezoz family in second [Warezov.dn] and third place [Warezov.hb] making it a clean sweep of the top three spots for Warezov.

Scano.gen has dropped down the chart from fifth to tenth allowing Zafi.b to move up one place to ninth.

One of the Bagle family [Bagle.gt] has managed to claw its way back in to the top ten, after November's failure to make an appearance at all in the top ten.



In the SOPHOS chart we see a different pattern; Netksy.p has consolidated its grip on second place in December. Pole position has been stolen by Dref-V [aka tibs.jy] which is a new entry in December's chart, just managing to squeeze in before the end of the month. Here is some commentary on it from Sophos:

"The Dref-V mass-mailing worm, which poses as a New Year e-card, was discovered on December 30, 2006, and by the following day accounted for 93.7% of infected emails."

Zafi.b has dropped down the chart in December from fourth to sixth. Nyxem.D [aka MyWife] has reversed direction and has fallen down the chart from sixth to ninth.

Stratiozip [aka Warezov] which was November's pole sitter has fallen down the chart to fourth place. The downloader variant of Stratio is in the tenth and final slot of December's top ten.

Only one member of the Mytob family has managed to stay in the top ten in December, this being Mytob.C, however, it has climbed back up from eighth to third place. Netsky [D] has disappeared from the top ten again. Mydoom-O which made a re-entry in November's top ten remains static in seventh place in December.

November's new entry, W32/Sality.AA is now up one place from ninth to eighth place.

To complete this month's top ten we have W32.Bagle-Zip which was a new entry in June's chart, dropping down the chart from third place to fifth spot.



The final pie chart below shows the Top 10 malware families trapped by percentage. As you can see this includes not only mass-mailers but also share-crawling worms and bots. This month the table is headed up once more by the September 2005 leader Tenga, which has dropped back from its high of over 75 percent of the November pie to just over 48.5 percent in December. Mytob has reappeared again after dropping out of November's chart, it is back in in eighth place. Operserv has lost the second place which it gained in November, dropping down to sixth spot. Netsky has further consolidated its hold on fourth. Dupator is up one space from seventh to sixth place.

Warezov jumps from fifth place up to third in November's chart and is making its presence felt as part of the reason for the massive increase in spam we are all seeing.

Bagle slips down the chart from sixth to seventh and Downloader slips from eighth to tenth place.

New entries include Tibs, Sality, Warezov, Zapchast and Small, in at second, third, fifth, seventh and ninth places respectively. IRC.Flood completes the chart, in tenth place.



If you wish to see the current top 10, then see my external website at http://arachnid.homeip.net. The data which feeds the WormCharmer stats is updated every 3 minutes 24 hours a day [barring power-cuts, internet connectivity issues or hardware faults].

Please feel free to ask questions if you need any clarification on the data, the setup or whatever.

Now, let's switch to a different method: The following graph shows the percentage of malware that I received and my Bayesian Filtering tool classified correctly. You can see the data for the whole of 2004, 2005 and 2006 [up to the end of December] here. This clearly shows that December was significantly up from November's relative low, this can be attributed to the Tibs.aj mass-mailer that we saw at the end of December. However, the overall trend is still downwards.



The raw statistics (both CSV and Graphed) can be found in the usual place on my site. If you feel you need access then please contact me to discuss.

If we look at the overall growth of malware in 2006, it grew from 168,807 [as at the end of December 2005] to 222,473 [as at the end of 2006]. That's a growth of 53,666 new malware strains and/or variants during 2006, just short of my guesstimate of 55,000.

What's New?
Instead of including commentary here about things I have already written about, I will offer links to other blog entries that may be of interest, topical, or cover some of the interesting occurrences in December 2006.



Conclusions:
Spam appeared to have recovered during December from the drop witnessed during November.419s seem to have dropped unexpectedly, and we've seen Phishing scams recovering further from their fall in October. Malware [via e-mail] bucked the trend and rose during December, mainly due to Tibs. As shown above the scammers have been out in force during December, the 'Savechilds.net' example included in this report is just one of a number of similar scams deployed during December.

Spammers are still increasing their use of graphical based spam, which is harder for anti-spam tools to identify without the use of OCR or other technologies; not only are they moving to graphical spam but to stop simple filtering based on hashing or check-summing of images, they are producing graphics that contain random micro-dots, colour maps and other graphical artefacts, such as geometric shapes and random borders. Looks like we are witnessing yet another arms-race, this time it is between the spammers and the spam fighting tools and community.

Links:

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Monday, 22 January 2007

Storm Worm Gang Have Been 'Very, Very' Busy

Since late Friday we've seen a number of 'waves' of new variants of the so-called 'Storm Worm' which I blogged about here [Archived].

The new variants have used some of the same subject lines and attachment names as the earlier ones. So, this is really just a quick update.

The new subject lines, not including the ones we've already seen, include:

  • A Little (sex) Card

  • A Romantic Place

  • A Special Kiss

  • All For You

  • Breakfast in Bed Coupon

  • Chinese missile shot down USA aircraft

  • Chinese missile shot down USA satellite

  • Fidel Castro dead.

  • First Nuclear Act of Terrorism!

  • For Better or Worse

  • For You

  • Happy World Religion Day!

  • Hey Cutie

  • Hugging My Pillow

  • Hugo Chavez dead.

  • I am Complete

  • I Believe

  • I Love You So

  • Moonlit Waterfall

  • Most Beautiful Girl

  • My Eye on You

  • Our Love Everyday

  • President of Russia Putin dead

  • Radical Muslim drinking enemies' blood.

  • Russian missle shot down Chinese satellite

  • Russian missle shot down USA aircraft

  • Russian missle shot down USA satellite

  • Sadam Hussein alive!

  • Sadam Hussein safe and sound!

  • Safe and Sound

  • Safe Wth You
  • So in Love

  • Someone at Last

  • The commander of a U.S. nuclear submarine lunch the rocket by mistake.

  • The Dance of Love

  • The Love Bugs

  • The Miracle of Love

  • The Mood for Love

  • The Supreme Court has been attacked by terrorists. Sen. Mark Dayton dead!

  • Third World War just have started!

  • U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has kicked German Chancellor Angela Merkel

  • U.S. Southwest braces for another winter blast. More then 1000 people are dead.

  • Vacation Love

  • Venezuelan leader: "Let's the War beginning".

  • Want to Meet?

  • We Are Different

  • We Have Walked

  • Window of beauty

  • With This Ring

  • Wrapped Up

  • You + Me

  • You're Soo kissable

  • You Asked Me Why


And the attachment names include:

  • Video.exe

  • Full Video.exe

  • Read More.exe

  • Full Text.exe

  • Full Clip.exe

  • Flash Postcard.exe

  • Greeting Postcard.exe

  • Greeting Card.exe

  • Postcard.exe


Here's a screenshot of one of the latest ones:



It also seems that the 'Storm Worm Gang' are testing their new creations against a number of anti-virus products, to ensure that they are not detected when they release them. They are also using new tools and techniques, including 'kernel level rookit drivers', which means that they are going to be harder to detect once installed, even if you updated anti-virus has a signature for them!

It appears that the frequency of new variants being launched is also increasing, so do not launch any attachments that you are not expecting and update your anti-virus at least once a day, as otherwise you will become a victim.

So, in those immortal words, "Be careful out there..."

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Friday, 19 January 2007

When is a Damaged Malware NOT a Damaged Malware...

When it is badly named, of course. Below is a perfect example of how to cause confusion by a lack of 'joined-up-thinking' from one of the major anti-virus vendors.

Late last night I started to receive some odd e-mails, these had provocative and/or eye-catching subject lines and when viewed there was no body text, just an attachment. This immediately started my 'malware-sense' tingling!

What made it tingle more was that the attachment was an .EXE [Windows executable file] and I was seeing these coming from a number of random e-mail addresses, a sure sign of either a mass-mailer, or a new malware threat being spammed out via a botnet.

Oh, I better also mention that my Bayesian Filter which I trained to identify malware also flagged it correctly, even though it hadn't seen this variant before.

I immediately started to take a peek inside the attachment, using a hex editor and also a number of tools I've created. Here's the detail on one of the attachments using one of my tools:

FileName: Video.exe
FileDateTime: 18/01/2007 23:00:39
Filesize: 29347
MD5: 8cb9492e06662a7b4a072cbbe03bbffe
CRC32: 714168B3
File Type: PE Executable
Packer: UPX

Hmmm... it is UPX packed, another very strong indicator of it almost certainly being malware.

Next I scanned it with Kaspersky, and this is what it reported:

Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Small.dam

OK, so if I read that right it is a 'damaged' variant of 'Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Small', if so it isn't a viable threat. Just to make sure I scanned it with a number of other AV tools, and none of them were detecting anything in the file, most odd!

However, it seems that this is not a 'damaged' variant after all, but variant 'DAM' of 'Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Small'. The AV industry use the extension 'dam' to normally indicate a damaged file, and they use the extension 'gen' to indicate that the file has been detected using a 'generic' or 'family' signature or algorithm.

So, let me be crystal clear, this is NOT a damaged variant after all, it is a fully-functional malware variant mistakenly given the 'dam' identifier as that was the next alphabetical identifier after variant 'dal'. Nice work guys, you're causing problems for us end-users of your products by not skipping over this extension that you normally only use for 'broken' malware!

Let me now clarify what you may see if you one, or more, of this new malware threat. First the subject lines you may see.

230 dead as storm batters Europe.
A killer at 11, he's free at 21 and kill again!
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has kicked German Chancellor Angela Merkel
Naked teens attack home director.
British Muslims Genocide


And here is a list of the attachments seen, so far:

Video.exe
Full Story.exe
Read More.exe
Full Clip.exe
Full Video.exe


Here is a screen-shot of what one of them looks like in Thunderbird:



I managed to get a file tested this morning against about 30 scanners, here are the results:

Scan report of: Video.exe

@Proventia-VPS -
AntiVir -
Avast! -
AVG -
BitDefender MemScan:Trojan.Agent.AHS
ClamAV Trojan.Downloader-647
Command W32/Downloader.AYDY
Dr Web Trojan.Spambot
eSafe Trojan/Worm [101] (suspicious)
eTrust-INO -
eTrust-INO (BETA) -
eTrust-VET Win32/Tibs!generic
eTrust-VET (BETA) Win32/Pecoan.B
Ewido -
F-Prot W32/Downloader.AYDY
F-Secure Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Small.dam
F-Secure (BETA) Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Small.dam
Fortinet -
Fortinet (BETA) -
Ikarus Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Small.dam
Kaspersky Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Small.dam
McAfee -
McAfee (BETA) Downloader-BAI trojan
Microsoft -
Nod32 Win32/Nuwar.Q worm
Norman W32/Tibs.gen12
Panda -
Panda (BETA) Trj/Alanchum.NX
QuickHeal -
Rising -
Sophos Troj/DwnLdr-FYD
Symantec Trojan.Packed.8
Symantec (BETA) Trojan.Packed.8
Trend Micro TROJ_SMALL.EDW
Trend Micro (BETA) TROJ_SMALL.EDW
UNA -
VBA32 -
VirusBuster Trojan.DL.Tibs.Gen!Pac13
WebWasher Trojan.Dldr.Small.DBX
YY_Spybot Smitfraud-C.,,Installer


As you can see, many anti-virus tools are now detecting this, but only if you have updated this morning, otherwise all bets are off.

F-Secure have also found out that the attachment when run does the following:
Drops the following files upon execution:

* %SysDir%\wincom32.sys - Kernel mode driver component
* %SysDir%\peers.ini - Initialization file component

It also installs itself as a service with the name "wincom32" by creating the following registry keys:

* [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\wincom32]
* [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Enum\Root\LEGACY_WINCOM32]

As this is a new threat and seems to be rather complex I would suggest you look at the full description, which is still being updated.

To protect yourself from this, update your AV, and if you do receive any of these e-mails with the attachments, just delete them, and whatever you do then DON'T open the attachment as it contains a so-called 'rootkit' and then proceeds to invite lots of its friends in to party on your hard disk, LAN and Internet connection.

Apart from the confusion caused by Kaspersky with their choice of name, you can see that most other vendors can't agree what to call it either...no change there then! ;-)

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Thursday, 18 January 2007

Diamonds are a Malware Spammers Best Friend...

Here's a post from one of my colleagues [Darren] who kindly wrote this posting for me when I was tied up trying to finish a very urgent report [many thanks for doing this for me Darren].

We have been made aware of a number of emails coming through from an online jewellery store notifying you that the credit card you used for your recent order has a few problems. You've got a bill for £500+ sat there along with a "form" attached that they're asking you to fill in to confirm the information.

The email looks like this:

Dear Customer,
This is an automatic message from JewelleryCatalogue.co.uk Secure Online Checkout directed to the e-mail address included in your billing
information. Please do not reply to this message!

Your credit card transaction is pending. The system reported the following error: (3100) Invalid CardIDName
Please verify the transaction details in the form attached and submit your credit card details again. Alternatively, you can go back to
the payment method selection page and pick an alternative mode of payment.

Items in cart:

3104B 9ct White Gold Diamond Necklace 1 215.58
6249E 9ct White Gold Diamond Onyx Cufflinks 1 338.67

Extra:

Free Platinum Gold Silver Cloth 1 0.00

Post:

Next Day Insured Signed for P&P 1 4.95
Total: 559.20

Tip: If you plan to be a frequent user of our Online Shop you may wish to store your name and address on your computer. These details are
securely passed through 128-bit SecureTrading system to us when you make a purchase.

Sincerely,

JewelleryCatalogue.co.uk

Fine Diamonds & Quality Jewellery.
We promise you the lowest prices in the UK.
GUARANTEED.

----Attachments----
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="PF-3001-2420.exe"



Eeek! You're being charged for an order you haven't made, £338 for cufflinks too!!! Checking that your email address isn't Peter-Stringfellow@stringfellows.net you quickly load the attachment in order to sort this mess out - OOPS!

The attachment you've just loaded is infact malware that connects off to a website (which is down at time of writing) and downloads all sorts of nasty apps.. this is what the AV vendors have on it at the moment:

Scan report of: PF-3001-2420.exe.1

@Proventia-VPS -
AntiVir TR/Dldr.DElf.OR.20
Avast! -
AVG -
BitDefender DeepScan:Generic.Malware.dld!!.F2718523
ClamAV Trojan.Downloader-640
Command W32/Downloader.gen10
Dr Web -
eSafe -
eTrust-INO -
eTrust-INO (BETA) -
eTrust-VET Win32/SillyDl.CEK
eTrust-VET (BETA) Win32/SillyDl.CEK
Ewido -
F-Prot W32/Downloader.gen10
F-Secure Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Tiny.fo
F-Secure (BETA) Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Tiny.fo
Fortinet suspicious
Fortinet (BETA) suspicious
Ikarus Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Tiny.fo
Kaspersky Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Tiny.fo
McAfee -
McAfee (BETA) Generic Downloader.ab trojan
Microsoft -
Nod32 Win32/TrojanDownloader.Tiny.NCA trojan (variant)
Norman W32/Downloader (Sandbox)
Panda Suspicious file
Panda (BETA) Suspicious file
QuickHeal Suspicious (warning)
Rising -
Sophos Troj/DwnLdr-FYB
Symantec -
Symantec (BETA) Downloader
Trend Micro -
Trend Micro (BETA) TROJ_DLOADER.GPY
UNA -
VBA32 Win32.Trojan.Downloader (suspected)
VirusBuster -
WebWasher Trojan.Dldr.DElf.OR.20
YY_Spybot -


Allowing the file to run in a controlled environment shows us more information about what it does.

Sandbox report: 12:16:53

PF-3001-2420.exe.1 : W32/Downloader (Signature: W32/DLoader.BRTQ)

[ General information ]
* File length: 2614 bytes.
* MD5 hash: badaaae82fcf611b67b053960f2f4144.

[ Changes to filesystem ]
* Creates file C:\WINDOWS\TEMP\suhoy361.exe.

[ Network services ]
* Downloads file from http://...com/downloads/suhoy361.exe as C:\WINDOWS\TEMP\suhoy361.exe.

[ Security issues ]
* Starting downloaded file - potential security problem.

[ Process/window information ]
* Attemps to open C:\WINDOWS\TEMP\suhoy361.exe .

[ Signature Scanning ]
* C:\WINDOWS\TEMP\suhoy361.exe (4096 bytes) : no signature detection. 12:16:54


The jeweller in question is the victim in all this, sending people viruses isn't usually good for business. As you've probably guessed the emails don't infact originate from them, here's what they have to say:



As usual be very sceptical of any emails you get out of the blue telling you that you've won something, your bank needs to confirm your details, your ebay account has been cancelled etc. especially ones that encourage you to run an attachment (remember Iloveyou?) NEVER run any attachments that look suspicious, where necessary check with the sender first - would you like to be responsible for a new virus outbreak?

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Tuesday, 9 January 2007

Real Rootkits, Virtual Conference

On the 10th of January 2007, I will be presenting at my first 'Virtual' conference, this being AVIEN's 2nd 'Virtual' conference; details and joining instructions can be found here: http://www.avien.org/conf2007.html

Although this is my first 'Virtual' conference, I have spoken/presented at many 'real' conferences, so I am reasonably comfortable in doing this, although I do find that I prefer a visible audience, rather than just 'presenting-down-a-phone', and not sure if anyone is still there, or even awake!

However, I have presented via the phone before, but never as part of a conference! The last one I did 'down-the-phone' was one on 'Bots and Botnets'.


The topic I'm covering this time is 'Rootkits: No longer just a *NIX problem'.

So, if you have a few hours to kill, and nothing better to do with your time, then please feel free to join in.

The good news is that I'm only presenting for 20-30 minutes, so you don't have to listen to me for the whole time. ;-) That said, there are three other very good speakers on this 'Virtual' conference, so it should be very worthwhile if you are interested in malware and anti-malware 'stuff' or just curious about AVIEN, and what it does.

The full agenda can be found here: http://www.avien.org/conf2007.html

If you do attend, I would welcome your feedback...[Now where did I put that fireproof suit?]

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