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Another Sony Rootkit?

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Mon Aug 27, 2007 09:40 AM
from the slow-learners dept.
An anonymous reader writes to tell us F-Secure is reporting that the drivers for Sony Microvault USB sticks uses rootkit techniques to hide a directory from the Windows API. "This USB stick with rootkit-like behavior is closely related to the Sony BMG case. First of all, it is another case where rootkit-like cloaking is ill advisedly used in commercial software. Also, the USB sticks we ordered are products of the same company — Sony Corporation. The Sony MicroVault USM-F fingerprint reader software that comes with the USB stick installs a driver that is hiding a directory under "c:\windows\". So, when enumerating files and subdirectories in the Windows directory, the directory and files inside it are not visible through Windows API. If you know the name of the directory, it is e.g. possible to enter the hidden directory using Command Prompt and it is possible to create new hidden files. There are also ways to run files from this directory. Files in this directory are also hidden from some antivirus scanners (as with the Sony BMG DRM case) — depending on the techniques employed by the antivirus software. It is therefore technically possible for malware to use the hidden directory as a hiding place."
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[+] Games: BioShock Installs a Rootkit 529 comments
An anonymous reader writes "Sony (the owner of SecureROM copy protection) is still up to its old tricks. One would think that they would have learned their lesson after the music CD DRM fiasco, which cost them millions. However, they have now started infesting PC gaming with their invasive DRM. Facts have surfaced that show that the recently released PC game BioShock installs a rootkit, which embeds itself into Explorer, as part of its SecureROM copy-protection scheme. Not only that, but just installing the demo infects your system with the rootkit. This begs the question: Since when did demos need copy protection?"
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  • Sony (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jshriverWVU (810740) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:42AM (#20371527)
    What happened to Sony? Growing up they always seemed like a great tech company, pumping out quality products that most people liked. When did politics and this kinda crap really start. It's sad.
    • Re:Sony (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Prof.Phreak (584152) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:46AM (#20371589) Homepage
      It started when they became an entertainment corp, rather than a technology corp.
      • Re:Sony (Score:4, Funny)

        by hackstraw (262471) on Monday August 27 2007, @10:05AM (#20371873) Homepage
        It started when they became an entertainment corp, rather than a technology corp.

        So, are rootkits entertainment or technology?

        • Re:Sony (Score:5, Funny)

          by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 27 2007, @10:09AM (#20371945)
          I'm finding this all quite entertaining, I must say. So I think that's your answer.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Seems like they've been pushing their own proprietary stuff for the past 20 yrs - most recently Blue Ray, but then there was that miniDisc that went nowhere. Not sure...did they have a roll in VHS/Beta? I used to be a fanboy, but it seems they get more negative press anymore.
      • Re:Sony (Score:4, Interesting)

        by king-manic (409855) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:50AM (#20371667)
        Seems like they've been pushing their own proprietary stuff for the past 20 yrs - most recently Blue Ray, but then there was that miniDisc that went nowhere. Not sure...did they have a roll in VHS/Beta? I used to be a fanboy, but it seems they get more negative press anymore.

        MD disks were actually very successful across asia. They didn't find a market in North America. In the same span they have also created the 3.5 inch floppy, the CD, and had a bit of input on the DVD. It's be more accurate to describe their format strategies as being hit and miss since they have been part of some huge dogs (beta, UMD) and some very successful formats (CDs, 3.5 inch floppies).
        • Re:Sony (Score:5, Informative)

          by Andy Dodd (701) <`ude.llenroc' `ta' `7dta'> on Monday August 27 2007, @09:55AM (#20371731) Homepage
          CD was Philips, not Sony.

          As to DVD - Not sure about the original DVD format, but Sony effectively created the recordable DVD format war with the + series of formats.

          And yes, Sony had a role in VHS vs. Beta - Beta was Sony's format.
        • Don't forget about Memory Stick, the solution to a problem that nobody has...a lack of choices among removable flash storage media.
          • Re:Sony (Score:5, Informative)

            by jandrese (485) <kensama@vt.edu> on Monday August 27 2007, @10:58AM (#20372627) Homepage Journal
            But the Memory Stick had all sorts of advantages, like a useless DRM system and twice the price per bit of all of the competing flash solutions. It also capped out on capacity a lot quicker than its contemporaries. Who wouldn't want one?
          • Re:Sony (Score:5, Interesting)

            by mattpalmer1086 (707360) on Monday August 27 2007, @11:06AM (#20372737)
            God, memory stick. I have a Sony phone, which is quite nice. I was recently in Tokyo, and I wanted some extra memory for my phone, so I went to Akihabara - geek central. All the sales assistants in about 20 shops I visited just looked at my phone, shrugged their shoulders and said "Sony!". My Japanese is pretty poor, but I got the message. So I went to the big Sony building at Ginza. No deal. They said they only sold memory sticks in the European market - they were using something else in Japan.

            Since I was there, I pulled out a Sony camera I was trying to get a USB cable for. Again, no deal. This camera was North American Sony, and they didn't have those kinds of Sony cables in Japan.

            Sigh. This insistence on ignoring standards and doing everything themselves - not even consistently across the world - bugs me like hell. I doubt I'll buy any more Sony consumer electronics until they get it. Hope they do - they know how to make nicely designed bits of technology.

              • Re:Sony (Score:4, Interesting)

                by saigon_from_europe (741782) on Monday August 27 2007, @02:45PM (#20375341)
                I had their laptop. After some time, its transformer stopped working. I live in Serbia, and it is a bit tricky to get decent technical support/service here, but Sony has huge store in Belgrade downtown.

                I went there, but no luck. They do not sell laptops in Serbia (mine was brought from UK), so they gave me the telephone of one repair shop, but they were not sure if they could help me. Repair shop sent me to another repair shop, and so on... After three hops, they explained me what's the issue. Sony has very rigid standards for their repair shops. To be their certified repairmen, you have to guarantee that you'll solve all problems in 24 hours. They were not able to find anyone capable of that in Serbia, so they don't have any repair shop in Serbia.

                That's very interesting policy. Instead to give second class service to your customers, you give them - none.
                • Re:Sony (Score:4, Insightful)

                  by DigiShaman (671371) on Monday August 27 2007, @08:47PM (#20379259) Homepage
                  That's very interesting policy. Instead to give second class service to your customers, you give them - none.

                  Which in turn provides first class metrics applauded by upper management.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Yes, they were very successful with the 3.5 inch floppy.. also Trinitron screens, and the CD, which was co-developped with philips. They were also very successfull at putting DV/Firewire video in the hands of ordinary customers.

          yeah they made some lemons too, but like any tech company, that actually tries to invent stuff.
    • Re:Sony (Score:5, Insightful)

      by plover (150551) * on Monday August 27 2007, @09:47AM (#20371613) Homepage Journal
      It happened when they added a movie studio and a recording label to the corporation. The media side of the house demanded copy protection from the technical side of the house, without understanding the technical limitations.
    • Re:Sony (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Otter (3800) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:54AM (#20371717) Journal
      When did politics and this kinda crap really start.

      Hype here notwithstanding, this is not a "rootkit". It seems to be a bizarre form of write-protection.

      • Re:Sony (Score:5, Informative)

        Yes, it is a rootkit. It's modifying the kernel space to hide directories from the user. There are better ways of doing such a thing, but a rootkit has the advantage of keeping the files hidden from common methods of hidden-file detection. Something like a virus or trojan would tend to use a kit like this to make sure that it couldn't be found by antivirus software. Such kits also tend to mask the presence of their processes, just to make sure that they REALLY can't be detected.
        • Re:Sony (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Harmonious Botch (921977) * on Monday August 27 2007, @10:24AM (#20372149) Homepage Journal
          If it is a rootkit or not seems to me an academic question. I prefer to be asking: is my computer more vulnerable?
            • by nschubach (922175) on Monday August 27 2007, @02:44PM (#20375331) Journal
              A virus wouldn't put itself in this hidden folder instead?

              %USERPROFILE%\Local Settings\Temporary Internet Files\Content.IE5

              Or this one?
              %USERPROFILE%\Local Settings\Temporary Internet Files\OLK6F

              Maybe one this windows built in rootkit folder?

              c:\$Extend

              ..or maybe one of these hidden files?
              c:\$AttrDef

              c:\$BadClus

              c:\$Bitmap

              c:\$Boot

              c:\$LogFile

              c:\$Secure

              c:\$Volume

              All which the handy SysInternals hides as "Standard NTFS Metadata Files" by default.

              The existence of these files/folders are hidden to most users and most of them don't even know about them. You think virus scanners check the c:\$Extend folder? Is someone willing to drop in a known virus and see if it detects it? Honestly, I'm curious as to how many actually check this folder...
    • Re:Sony (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ajs (35943) <ajs@nOspam.ajs.com> on Monday August 27 2007, @10:07AM (#20371907) Homepage Journal
      I posted this on the firehose version of this article. Thought I should do so here too:

      Please note: this software simply creates a directory that is hidden from the Windows API for its fingerprint authentication. It's not actually a rootkit, just using one of the many tools of the trade of rootkits. The concern is that the hidden directory is hidden from all of the Windows API, including virus scanners, and thus could be used by malicious software to hide infected files.

      I'm not sure that it's reasonable to accuse Sony of distributing a rootkit when they've simply distributed software which uses a technique that could accidentally help malicious software.

      It's also probably a bad thing to keep swinging the rootkit-bat around like this. The next time some large corporation really tries to root all of their customers' machines, no one will believe the story.
      • Re:Sony (Score:5, Informative)

        Please note: this software simply creates a directory that is hidden from the Windows API for its fingerprint authentication. It's not actually a rootkit


        Please note the defenition of "rootkit," ripped from the beginning of the rootkit wikipedia article:

        A rootkit is a set of software tools intended to conceal running processes, files or system data from the operating system.


        If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, yada yada yada.
        • by IBBoard (1128019) on Monday August 27 2007, @11:22AM (#20372965) Homepage

          If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck,...

          Then lawyers for some large corporation will argue that it's actually some previously rare form of feathered marsupial?
        • Re:Sony (Score:5, Informative)

          by ajs (35943) <ajs@nOspam.ajs.com> on Monday August 27 2007, @11:27AM (#20373065) Homepage Journal

          Please note the defenition of "rootkit," ripped from the beginning of the rootkit wikipedia article:

          A rootkit is a set of software tools intended to conceal running processes, files or system data from the operating system.


          If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, yada yada yada.
          This is a naive definition (I'll edit it later, with appropriate sources). Many programs attempt to conceal files which are not rootkits. Rootkits are the core of a type of software that seeks to hide its own existence. This Sony software does no such thing. You can see the software. You can remove the software. You can view every one of the software's files. Even F-Secure said that they believed the software was designed only with the security of the thumbnail drive data in mind, not with any subversion of the host (like the real Sony rootkit that got them in so much trouble). It only seeks to protect sensitive biometric data which should not be visible to all programs) from the normal Windows API. Again, I'm not defending how they did this. It's poor design, as it has huge security implications. However, it's not a rootkit, but a poorly designed driver.

          We need to be more careful to cry wolf when there's, you know... a wolf. Otherwise, when some company decides to deploy a real rootkit again, no one is going to listen to us.
          • by KingSkippus (799657) * on Monday August 27 2007, @11:47AM (#20373297) Homepage Journal

            It only seeks to protect sensitive biometric data which should not be visible to all programs) from the normal Windows API.

            The intentions behind the software are irrelevant. The only thing that matters is what it does. What this software does is an end-run around the operating system, deliberately hiding things that should not and need not be hidden.

            Why shouldn't it be hidden? Because as has already been pointed out, malicious software can take advantage of the rootkit—which is what this is—as an attack vector to control someone's machine without their knowledge, and with damn little they can do about it.

            Please remember also that a lot of computer viruses and worms didn't start out with people saying, "I'm going to write a computer virus today!" They started out with someone saying, "Hmmm... I wonder if that would work..." and it goes from there. In fact, the guy who is credited with writing the first computer virus [slashdot.org] said, "It was a practical joke combined with a hack. A wonderful hack." Maybe, but it's stupid to deny what it was, a virus, just as it is to deny what this is, a rootkit.

  • Consider (Score:4, Insightful)

    by nlitement (1098451) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:43AM (#20371545)

    It is therefore technically possible for malware to use the hidden directory as a hiding place.
    Isn't software behaving like that already considered malware?
    • Re:Consider (Score:5, Insightful)

      by wizardforce (1005805) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:52AM (#20371685) Journal

      Isn't software behaving like that already considered malware?
      yes and no. it depends on what and how you use it. if you use the property of hiding directories as a simple way of keeping data from less experienced people [eg. slashdotters hiding the porn from their parents] then it isn't malware; in this case sony's software doesn't seem to be hding a directory for any good purpose, so yes it is malware.
      • Re:Consider (Score:5, Insightful)

        by B'Trey (111263) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:59AM (#20371793)
        No. The distinction is WHO's doing the hiding. If a user on the computer intentionally hides files or directories from other possible users on the computers, it's not malware. It may or may not be ethical, depending on who's doing the hiding and why. Presumably, it's the owner of the computer and they have a right to hid info from prying eyes. If not, the issue is with the user's actions and not with the software. If, however, a program creates files or directories and hides them (by means other than simply using the H attribute, at least) from the owner/user of the computer, it's malware. It's understandable for a content owner to wish to protect their content, but that doesn't justify them altering the behavior of a computer without the owner's express understanding and permission for what they're doing.
  • Hidden files (Score:5, Insightful)

    by king-manic (409855) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:43AM (#20371549)
    Is root kit now the new buzzword for "please send me traffic"? This isn't the same as a rootkit, it's just a annoyingly hidden directory. Can we tag this as FUD?
    • Re:Hidden files (Score:5, Insightful)

      by j00r0m4nc3r (959816) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:48AM (#20371633)
      It doesn't matter what their intent is, they are using rootkit techniques to hide shit on your computer. This allows other parties to piggyback on that tech and install other nastier UNDETECTABLE malware. It would be like if your house cleaning lady leaves your front door wide open when she leaves. Someone could stroll in, fuck your shit up, and leave undetected. Definitely something to seriously worry about.
    • Re:Hidden files (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Applekid (993327) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:50AM (#20371653)
      Hiding from the API is pretty important, actually. That's done by pulling the rug under the pointers to the functions that retreives lists of files/directories. If that's not a Windows rootkit, what is?

      And much like their last rootkit, this one can easily be used to cloak files on your system and is pretty much a fantastic place to put your virus. Way to really push the limits, guys.
    • Re:Hidden files (Score:5, Informative)

      by MontyApollo (849862) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:50AM (#20371669)
      First sentence from wikipedia article:

      "A rootkit is a set of software tools intended to conceal running processes, files or system data from the operating system"

      So, it sounds like a rootkit as described by wikipedia.
      • So, it sounds like a rootkit as described by wikipedia.

        Not for long! *rushes to edit wikipedia*

        "A rootkit is a set of software tools intended to conceal running processes, files or system data from the operating system, except when it's with Sony products"

        There! Now by definition, sony's isn't a rootkit anymore! :D

        (Legal Disclaimer: This was actually a joke, I didn't vandalize wikipedia or the like. <-- you can't never be too sure these days)
  • Format before use (Score:4, Interesting)

    by VincenzoRomano (881055) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:44AM (#20371559) Homepage Journal
    Maybe formatting USB memories before usage would be a good move.
    And using OS that won't run anything from the newly attached memry as a default would also help.
  • tsk tsk tsk... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by JazzyMusicMan (1012801) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:47AM (#20371609)
    They are simply conditioning a public growing weary of dishonest tactics and policies to steer clear of any products they produce. Sony has many divisions and has a presence in many markets, and they are royally screwing all of them up. First the music cd fiasco, now this, no wonder they were prematurely blasted for the SecuROM program that was talked about on here a few days ago. Most people automatically saw it as a rootkit or something they didn't want on their computer because of the record that Sony is establishing for itself. It doesn't matter that maybe it wasn't a rootkit or something malicious, if the public starts thinking that everything you produce is going to create security vulnerabilities and screw up their machine, they'll simply stay away without giving you a second (or third, [or fourth]) chance...
  • kiosk (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SolusSD (680489) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:47AM (#20371615) Homepage
    It seems to me that our personal computers are becoming more and more like kiosks where "vendors" install software they want and the "end users", ie) us, have less and less control over our own PCs. Think about it- DRM, (truly) hidden folders, subscriptino software, product activation, ..vista?
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      that's why some people are moving to linux and OS X. No matter what your believe on open vs closed source code. Linux is more "free" as in "freedom" than Windows, you don't hear people complaining about putting in a CD/DVD/USB key and having their system owned by some root-kit or DRM system that was installed w/o intervention. The freedom to own and do what I want with my hardware makes Linux a necessity. I agree with you. Running windows anymore is like running a kiosk. You pay for the hardware, and the so
  • Wow... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by shoptroll (544006) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:49AM (#20371639)
    Did anyone read the article before coming up with the post title? They say right in the middle of the article that it's not a rootkit, and "It is our belief that the MicroVault software hides this folder to somehow protect the fingerprint authentication from tampering and bypass. It is obvious that user fingerprints cannot be in a world writable file on the disk when we are talking about secure authentication. However, we feel that rootkit-like cloaking techniques are not the right way to go here."

    This is also nothing new in terms of USB drives. I have a USB flash drive, which I can't remember the name of, that essentially keeps a secure partition hidden from Windows unless you run a special app to put in a password to make it visible to Windows.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      That depends on your definition of "rootkit". It's using a driver to conceal the existence of a directory from standard Windows APIs and programs, which is very definitely a rootkit technique.
    • Re:Wow... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Idaho (12907) on Monday August 27 2007, @10:28AM (#20372211)

      Did anyone read the article before coming up with the post title? They say right in the middle of the article that it's not a rootkit, and "It is our belief that the MicroVault software hides this folder to somehow protect the fingerprint authentication from tampering and bypass.

      The intent is irrelevant w.r.t. the fact whether or not it uses rootkit-like behavior to implement it.


        It is obvious that user fingerprints cannot be in a world writable file on the disk when we are talking about secure authentication.


      This is why file access permissions/restrictions where invented in the 1970's.

      This is also nothing new in terms of USB drives. I have a USB flash drive, which I can't remember the name of, that essentially keeps a secure partition hidden from Windows unless you run a special app to put in a password to make it visible to Windows.


      That is a completely different technique at about 10 different levels. Of course the driver of some USB device may chose to reserve parts of the storage on said USB device for internal usage such that it cannot be (easily) accessed by normal means (i.e. the API offered by said driver). However, "cloaking" parts of the driver itself using rootkit-like mechanisms has, well, about nothing in common with such techniques.
  • A Nasty Trick (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Sigismundo (192183) on Monday August 27 2007, @09:56AM (#20371737)
    It reminds me of the time that some friends and I discovered that a labmate had left himself logged in as root on a virtual console at his Linux workstation. Here's what we did:
    1. Created a directory with the name " " (single space)
    2. Added that directory to his path
    3. Wrote a Perl script that would spit out a random quote from zippy 1/3 of the time, and then execute the program pointed to by argv[0]
    4. Populated the special hidden directory with symlinks to the perl script, each given the name of a common command like ls, ps, and so on.

    So whenever he ran a common command from his shell, he would first get a random quote from fortune appearing, followed by normal command output. He figured it out pretty quickly, but I like to think that there were a few moments where he entertained the idea of his workstation gaining sentience.

  • Desensitized (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Dachannien (617929) on Monday August 27 2007, @10:19AM (#20372079)
    The overuse of the term "rootkit" points to (at least) one thing: we've become so desensitized to security hazards that it takes a new buzzword for nefariousness to grab people's attention. Regardless of whether this is itself a rootkit or not, it's still a security hazard, and what's perhaps more ironic, that hazard was created in an attempt to effect "security through obscurity".

    • The issue here is the biometric stuff.

      This is an inherent problem in biometrics: you have to trust every scanner that takes a reading not to be trapdoored.

      The entire authentication process has to be performed verifiably in the scanner hardware and firmware, and the scanner itself had to be trusted - either it's your scanner or it belongs to someone you have to trust anyway.

      But no reversible form of the biometric information can be transferred to potentially untrusted storage.
    • by deftcoder (1090261) on Monday August 27 2007, @10:24AM (#20372151)
      A malicious driver is being installed that patches the Win32 API ( FindFirstFile() and FindNextFile() ) not to report the presence of a directory when enumerating through your C:\Windows folder.

      How is this *NOT* a rootkit? This is the very definition of one!
    • by LarsG (31008) on Monday August 27 2007, @10:20AM (#20372093) Journal
      First, the article has so many grammatical errors, that it's laughable.

      F-Secure is from Finland. You try writing Finnish some time.

      My "Windows API" as this article calls Explorer, is already set to view hidden folders.

      Turn in your geek card at the door when you leave.

      This is a driver that patches the Windows APIs in order to hide a directory. It will not show in Explorer or in any other program for that matter, even if Explorer is set to show 'hidden files'. Rootkit hunters like Blacklight and Rootkit Revealer do not flag regular 'hidden directories'. They read and parse the raw on-disk directory structure (that is, they have their own NTFS parser) and compare that to what the Windows FS API reports.

    • by deftcoder (1090261) on Monday August 27 2007, @10:28AM (#20372197)
      Hi.

      They are patching 2 API functions, FindFirstFile() and FindNextFile(), not to report the presence of a directory. They are doing this by loading a malicious *DRIVER*.

      This is quite different than simply toggling a flag for a given directory.