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Security IT

Inside a Modern Malware Distribution System 135

Scrabblous sends in this analysis of the Pushdo Trojan downloader's backend code and control server. Pushdo is a complex Trojan downloader that meticulously tracks its victims; much of its innovation is not in the Trojan itself but in its control infrastructure. Quoting: "The Pushdo controller also uses the GeoIP geolocation database in conjunction with whitelists and blacklists of country codes. This enables the Pushdo author to limit distribution of any one of the [421 different] malware loads from infecting users located in a particular country, or provides the ability to target a specific country or countries with a specific payload. Pushdo keeps track of the IP address of the victim, whether or not that person is an administrator on the computer, their primary hard drive serial number..., whether the filesystem is NTFS, how many times the victim system has executed a Pushdo variant, and the Windows OS version."
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Inside a Modern Malware Distribution System

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  • by jacquesm ( 154384 ) <j@NoSpam.ww.com> on Sunday December 23, 2007 @06:03PM (#21800636) Homepage
    If only Microsoft would spend that much effort on windows update...
    • by RAMMS+EIN ( 578166 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @07:15PM (#21801118) Homepage Journal
      ``If only Microsoft would spend that much effort on windows update...''

      They do, but they spend their efforts on making sure it doesn't work for pirates, rather than on making sure it works better for customers.
      • by Lumpy ( 12016 )
        and the funny part is they fail horribly at it. they dont make it not work for pirates. a Solid crackqfor WGA has been in the wild for over a year now. It even fools WMP11,Windows defender, and IE7. and even the last round of updates to WGA still have not disabled it or got around it's "crack".
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by jacquesm ( 154384 )
        afaik it does work fine for pirates but not for consumers that have paid for the product. A friend of mine made the linux switch solely because of being pissed off once to many while being told to re-register his machine after windows update literally crashed the box beyond recovery and they wouldn't activate him. He said, ok, fine don't activate me I'll get another OS. It's well past the point of being a nuisance, it's a real risk (having your machine taken down by an automatic update is *not* funny at all
  • by Iphtashu Fitz ( 263795 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @06:11PM (#21800690)
    Call me a troll if you will but I have a serious question here.

    Microsoft constantly claims that the main reason there are so many trojans & botnets like this is because Windows systems make up the vast majority of computer systems out there, not because Windows is any less secure than linux, OS-X, etc.

    Assume a completely even playing field where each of the three main consumer OS's, Windows, linux, and OS-X each has 33.3% of the market. Which environment would a trojan/botnet writer target and why? Put another way, how difficult would it be to develop a similarly intricate for linux or OS-X if a malware author decided to target those platforms?
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Sunday December 23, 2007 @06:30PM (#21800824)

        Download some malware, pop-up a fake window when the user does something to get the password, sudo with the password, install whatever else you want and setup init scripts, done!

        Okay, that first part "Download some malware". How?

        With Windows it is easy to explain. ActiveX.

        With Linux/Apple, it's not so easy.

        With old versions of Windows/Outlook, you could just mass mail the exploit and hope that enough people hadn't patched Outlook NOT to auto-run some executables.

        Or that they hadn't configured their security zones correctly.

        Microsoft is getting better. But they're still focused on adding layers of "security" instead of taking the simple option and just not installing so many services that the user will probably never use. So if there's any flaw in the various layers, you can still be cracked.
        • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @06:40PM (#21800884)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • Most malware now is either by drive by download using whatever plugin/browser exploit is new, or by having them download the exe from P2P or somewhere.

            How many of these go through Firefox, though?

            Most of their vulns have been plugin related it seems though - but I don't see why it would be different if Linux were targeted as much as windows is.

            Depends on the plugin. I imagine the plugins have to behave fairly differently on other OSes.

          • I wish it were that easy.
            I work in a small law firm in Blighty, and the new laws require us to use web services for searches, HIPS and the like. The damn things use activeX.
            In the last few weeks, a training CD arrived in the post from some gov.uk agency. Guess what - it uses activeX. On a freaking CD!
            ActiveX in the UK is like an infestation of cockroaches. It's not going away any time soon; if anything, it's getting worse.
        • ActiveX has been "defanged" for several years. You can't install random software without asking the user anymore in IE and that's been true for a long time.

          The Storm botnet has been spread by emailing out binaries that people then run, because they believe it to be something it's not. That's a hard problem to solve. It hasn't really been solved by any system yet - perhaps it can't be solved.

          Any computer where you can easily add new software (and a desktop OS that doesn't let you do that is one which isn

          • by daeg ( 828071 )
            Unfortunately, users are still largely stupid in terms of agreeing to ActiveX installs. Even Microsoft Update requires it. You'd think that by now Microsoft would somehow add Windows Update to an internal/default exemptions list, right? Or build it outside of the IE engine.
            • by jmauro ( 32523 )
              In Vista is appears to be outside of the engine finally. I still think it uses IE for connecting to the Windows Update web services, but its now a stand alone program in the OS instead of a program run from a web page. I was quite happy to see that the old Windows Update is now dead.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by WeirdJohn ( 1170585 )
          The trick is to (Step One) get the User to visit an Evil Website: "Naked Lesbian Twins with Machine Guns" should do it.

          (Step Two) Tell the User that a new "Video Codec" must be installed on their Ubuntu|Redhat|Suse System, which requires SuperUser privilege.

          (Step Three) popup a standard webbrowser password dialog, asking for the root password

          (Step Four) Start to download the "Codec Installer" that plays funny games with gcc, expect and python to sudo and install the malware when run.

          (Step Five) Tell user to
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by prshaw ( 712950 )
          >> Okay, that first part "Download some malware". How?

          Read up on how Storm-Worm got started. It sent an email asking people to go to a site and download something. Guess what, they did what they were told to do.

          Now it may have only have been 1 out of a 1000 people who actually did it, but that number is high enough to get a good start. And then all that those individual computers needed to be able to do was connect to a website and send email. Something pretty much any computer on the internet can do
        • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward
          Funny thing..ActiveX enabled leaves you vulnerable. Yet you can't use the windows update site without activeX enabled..And every time I get an update for InternetExploder I have to re disable activeX. What is needed is to enable active X on a site by site basis, with it default off.

          I can do the same thing with javascript content with seamonkey/firefox and the noscript plugin. (http://noscript.net/)
        • With Linux/Apple, it's not so easy.
          The last one I understood went like this
          1. user intstal PHP script that executes shell commands
          2. hacker tell script to download virus using wget program
          3. downloaded program is store in /tmp that is wiped clean every reboot
          4. downloaded program get chmod +x by hacker
          5. new executed program is ran as user:group nobody:nobody
          6. worm program that can't really do anything else, tries to infect other servers

          then SU see executable belonging to nobody in /tmp, kills process removes executable and

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by cheater512 ( 783349 )
        The fact that they cannot easily execute themselves stops a lot.
        A executable in a email attachment or web download cannot be executed by a idiot. It needs to be chmodded.

        Also the root password box appears significantly less than the Windows equivelants.
        Your average user will never have to enter it in.
        Helps reduce false negatives but it can still occur.
        • by h4rm0ny ( 722443 )

          A minor point, but Ubuntu has done its best to get rid of the root password. Yes - you can change the way it's set up, but for the vast majority of users it is just a case of typing their normal password in a second time for confirmation. It's just another thing that makes it seem that much less of a deal to allow a piece of software to run with root priveleges.
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by timeOday ( 582209 )
            I don't see why a botnet client would even need to run as root. So long as the user in question can run 'at' or cron, it can still install itself. I'll grant, a rootkit could conceal itself better with root access, but I doubt very many people would notice an extra process running anyways. (I think I'd call my trojan "bash").
            • I think I'd call mine super_pr0n_queen with the arguements "--enhance-pr0n --doublestuff ~/superpr0n.mp4" and the installer would put a very "interesting" movie in ~/superpr0n.mp4. A sure-fire guarantee to never be deleted!

            • If its not running as root then it will only run when that user is logged in.
              Once they log out it dies.

              Thats why root is highly desirable.
        • The fact that they cannot easily execute themselves stops a lot.
          It also stops the adoption of linux too. People like "double click to run".

          Even still you can "double click to install RPM", and that is just as good as an executable...
          • If the trojan spreads as a RPM, it still needs to be executed before it can take control.
            It cant automatically run its self.
            • In theory, you are correct. However, a fair number of evil software in the wild gets into your computers blood stream by you voluntarily running it. You know there are trojans that imitate common spyware removal programs? What about some "download accelerator" or "Pimp my Firefox Toolbar v3.423"?

              It cant automatically run its self.

              Sure it can. Find me a box running PHP and some one year old web application written on top of it and I'll execute it for you! :-)

              • You can never help idiots who will always type in their root password.
                However far fewer people will be stupid enough to enter their root pass than click 'Yes' to UAC.

                Nothing is impossible especially when it comes to computers.
                When defending against malware you want to make it as improbable as possible though and Linux does this better than Windows.
      • by WGR ( 32993 )
        On most Windows systems, the user is running as Administrator, so you do not even have to ask the user to install software. That is the main problem.
        Vista changes this (at last), but until Vista (or an updated XP) is the norm, then Windows is easier to Trojan.

        Mac OS-X is almost as easy since the .dmg files are so common for so many things from document updates to kernel installs that users are almost sure to type in password for installation.

        Linux requires more work because most Linux users have a separate
        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • but a lot of distros like Ubuntu don't have root - you just sudo with the user's own password
            Well, if I may nitpick as well...

            Ubuntu does have root, but it's configured so you can't log in to root. Not quite the same thing.

      • The only real deterrent for Linux right now is the low number of machines and having to get their password so they can set the init scripts

        No, the real deterrent for Linux is that any significant malware attack will be patched by the community MUCH faster than with Windows.

        There's a significant cost to developing the type of malware that would be capable of building a Linux botnet, and that investment would be lost when the community reacted. The cost/benefit for developing malware on Linux is a long wa

        • > the real deterrent for Linux is that any significant malware attack will be patched by the community

          Have you been reading the other comments? How can you patch the stupidity of your users?

          After a clueless user has been owned properly, there is probably no effective way for the community to help him; that would require a full reinstall from scratch. This is not dependent on the operating system, as far as I can see.
          • Have you been reading the other comments? How can you patch the stupidity of your users?

            Yeah, I've read them. That's just the usual FUD that's been debunked many times.

            The reason social-engineering attacks are so successful on Microsoft platforms, especially Microsoft Outlook, is that the kind of thing you need to trick the user into doing is very simple---typically a single mouse-click. True, many installations pop up warning dialogs for "potentially dangerous" actions, but novice users are used to many such dialogs, and probably just dismiss them as a matter of course.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by m50d ( 797211 )
      Assume a completely even playing field where each of the three main consumer OS's, Windows, linux, and OS-X each has 33.3% of the market. Which environment would a trojan/botnet writer target and why?

      Even if marketshare was the same, there are still other variables to consider: how useful is the OS, and what is the userbase like? My instinct would be to go for linux - it's (marginally, and in my experience) more stable, systems are more likely to be left running 24/7, and systems programming for it is easi

      • by LiquidCoooled ( 634315 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @07:26PM (#21801182) Homepage Journal
        The only problem with releasing trojans in Linux is that the damned things have to be GPL.
        Having to leave the contact details for people wanting the source also makes it a bit tricky.
      • by sowth ( 748135 )

        ... systems programming for it is easier - you don't have to e.g. jump through hoops to get raw sockets ...

        You don't have to jump through hoops to get raw sockets on Linux, you just have to become root....ummm yeah. On any reasonably configured Linux system, getting root is usually a difficult hoop to jump through, assuming there is no social engineering of someone who has the root account. Then again, with things like Nvidia's (an other mfgrs) buggy drivers and Ubuntu's let's just make people use sudu in

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      point 1. FUD, Microsoft's argument is a compete load of horsesht. The reason it's most effected is because low level identification of processes is obscured. Even if it's just simple rot13 encoding in registry to mask info about installed programs. In the *NIX world its almost impossible to hide a running process.

      point 2, Windows User basis = BOZOS also untrue. a lot can be done in the windoze world. its is just done with broken legs has the price of entry.

      Malware will go away when windows goes open source
      • ``In the *NIX world its almost impossible to hide a running process.''

        Ah, yeah? I don't think so. Given that you've already compromised the host, that is. And if you can't hide your process, you can always try to masquerade as a process that should be running.
        • by Keruo ( 771880 )
          > Given that you've already compromised the host,

          Why masquerade?
          You replace the binaries which show running processes with section of code hiding your-malware-process.
          Since the host is compromised, it's highly unlikely running tripwire or some such anyways which might reveal process replacing.

    • by flyingfsck ( 986395 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @06:26PM (#21800796)
      Actually, there are vastly more Linux systems out there than Windows systems. Each year about 300 million Linux devices are produced - most cell phones and routers. These devices have a life span of 5 years or more, meaning that there should be about 2 billion Linux devices out there. In contrast, there are only about 600 million Windows devices. Also, note that there are more Linux servers on the internet, than Windows servers. The simple fact that these Linux devices and servers are mostly secure, while the Windows machines are mostly insecure, therefore has nothing to do with numbers.
      • good reply, but let me add something.

        Most apps in *nix are system specific, so when they do find something wrong, it's an easy fix, but when we get to windows, there are 100's of apps, these apps make all system admins crazy ( just had a new program installed and it was calling home via a port that I had never seen used ( in the 52000 range ).

        I truly think deep in my heart that windows coders just don't give a shit about really doing quality code, all they do is put the crap out then fix and patch. all come
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Torvaun ( 1040898 )
          Yes, and by the time you finished any sizable app, one that was "good enough" would already have been released, and gobbled up marketshare. The problem with chasing perfection is that it takes forever, and even if you find it, most people don't need it.
          • how true :( after reading your post, I realized that I did a web site, quick and dirty, worked real well and left it alone. Now I am going to clean it up and make sure that I reduce the code by 25%.
        • I truly think deep in my heart that windows coders just don't give a shit about really doing quality code, all they do is put the crap out then fix and patch. all comes down to the money.

          You might be right with that. I just witnessed a discussion on IRC about web-design. One guy doing that stuff for money, the other for OSS-projects. The guy doing that for money had his customers: companies, that want sites coded - for their customers, who most likely won't give a damn if that page they're trying to buy things from is valid XHTML or not - so the companies don't give a damn themselves. And at the end of the day, the guy has to code that sites to appeal to the customers - who will most likel

      • by IamTheRealMike ( 537420 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @06:45PM (#21800924)

        That reasoning is invalid. There are tens of millions of XBoxes in the world, all of which run a customized version of Windows, yet I'm not aware of any viruses for the XBox. I guess Windows must be entirely secure!

        Or maybe desktop security and arbitrary-consumer-electronic-device security are different problems with different solutions.

        The other poster is correct. There is no difference in Windows vs Linux desktop security. It's beyond trivial to phish or intercept the users root password, if you want it, which you might not bother with because there are plenty of other ways to hide in a modern operating system (google "user mode rootkit").

        • Its harder to get the root password because its used for very few things from a user's point of view.
          Yes there will be some idiots who will type it in no matter what but the chances are lower than clicking 'Allow' with UAC.
        • SELinux (enabled by default on Fedora and others) greatly decreases the possibilities of something stupid like this happening. Now if only we didn't continually tell users to "make, sudo make install" everything and actually used signed packages. Why? How trivial is it to get a user to do a "sudo make install" on a Makefile that embeds a rootkit?
        • Your counter argument is flawed, if you ask me.

          First, even if you include the tens of millions of XBoxs, using the grandparent's post, you still have less Windows boxes than Linux boxes. Also, is not the software on a XBox much different from that of a standard Windows PC?

          Finally, yes, XBoxes - except the XBox is a relatively sandboxed environment. How easy is it to develop for, how many people do develop for it, and how many XBox users are going to go get homegrown XBox software and run it? (And furt
        • by yanyan ( 302849 )
          I think the reason why we don't hear about viruses for the XBox is that it's a pretty locked-down system; functionality is limited to little more than inserting the game media and then installing and running it. I'm probably wrong, but people don't use their XBoxes to browse web sites, download and read email, run p2p applications, etc., all of which pose security risks. I would also assume that network connectivity is only restricted to the Xbox live service, but i realize that it probably isn't hard to wr
        • by guruevi ( 827432 )
          There are two reasons for that:

          Windows on XBox is not the same Windows as Windows XP or Windows Vista. It's a very much trimmed down version of Windows 2000. It has parts of the kernel but has none of the shenanigans that are called Internet Explorer, the Explorer shell or ActiveX. Also, you can't surf the internet or send/receive e-mails on an XBox nor can you run executables that have not been sanctioned by Microsoft (it's what we call DRM).

          Now if we had a Windows that was trimmed down to the bones, didn'
      • The total number of devices is irrelevant. Cell phones, routers, and other embedded devices are set up once, and then mass-produced, so someone is easily able to make painstaking efforts to ensure security. On servers, this is also true, to a much lesser extent. On the desktop, it's almost never true (you and I care about making sure our machines are secure, but we're the vast minority of desktop users). The desktop area is where people care the least, and so it's the most attacked. Windows' dominance is in
    • by mrderm ( 685352 )

      Which environment would the botnet writer target if he had a free hand?

      No doubt, linux.

      Written in python.

      Source in git.

      If you need to ask why, you'll never understand.

    • by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF ( 813746 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @06:45PM (#21800930)

      Assume a completely even playing field where each of the three main consumer OS's, Windows, linux, and OS-X each has 33.3% of the market. Which environment would a trojan/botnet writer target and why? Put another way, how difficult would it be to develop a similarly intricate for linux or OS-X if a malware author decided to target those platforms?

      This is an interesting question, but it lacks some details that may make a large difference. First, was it a single Linux distribution or a mixture of the ones currently available. Second, are we talking Windows Vista, or are we talking about the current mix of Windows versions deployed today?

      Potential reasons why it is easier to target Windows:

      • Malware authors are familiar with Windows and Windows development tools and often are not experienced in coding for other platforms.
      • Even with an even distribution of OS's, MS still dominates certain application segments on Windows, with MS Office, Outlook, and IE. Other platforms have more varied application sets by comparison, making it harder to make a virus work via an exploit for a particular application.
      • Windows in general runs with more network services listening by default than either OS X or Linux and each one is a potential hole.
      • Windows fails to operate using standard protocols, so assuming most networks in the future are mixed, for full functionality Windows servers often have to run two services for a given function, versus one when using Linux or OS X. (For example, a Windows box might be listening to the local network using UPnP SSDP to discover network services, as well as ZeroConf, which is implemented by various applications on Windows, whereas OS X and Linux use only the standard ZeroConf.)
      • Windows has a different user base from the other OS's and it is often a less security conscious one overall. That could change, however if market share does.

      On the other hand, Windows has a few advantages as well:

      • More anti-virus tools and services are available for Windows
      • Windows makes better use of sandboxes in some instances than the vast majority of Linux distros.

      The question is pretty academic though. Market share is not going to shift drastically overnight, nor distribute evenly. Market share has an enormous affect on the products themselves. Right now Linux and OS X have appropriate levels of security so that it is not a big issue for their users. If security threats increased for either platform, security improvements would also increase because the developers are motivated to not lose money.MS is currently a monopoly so the fact that Windows does not have sufficient security to deal with the malware ecosystem does not cost them much money at all, so they are nt motivated to fix it. If Windows had 30% of the market, they would no longer have a monopoly and they would fix their security problems or go out of business.

      Having a diverse computing market makes things hard for botnet operators, because it lessens the effect of any vulnerability and because it motivates better security through competition between the players in that market. The theoretical you propose would change things in many, many ways. In some ways, Linux and OS X would become bigger targets and have to adapt their security to deal with it, but we'll never know what would hold up as the "best" six months or two years afterwards.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Assume a completely even playing field where each of the three main consumer OS's, Windows, linux, and OS-X each has 33.3% of the market. Which environment would a trojan/botnet writer target and why?

      I'd say Linux and OS X at that point, because both are Unix. Much easier to port things between Linux and OS X than it is to port things between either and Windows.

      Put another way, how difficult would it be to develop a similarly intricate for linux or OS-X if a malware author decided to target those platform

    • by IamTheRealMike ( 537420 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @07:15PM (#21801116)

      how difficult would it be to develop a similarly intricate for linux or OS-X if a malware author decided to target those platforms?

      Here's how you could make a somewhat modern piece of malware for Linux. I'll leave out the stuff that's the same between operating systems ... the control networks, etc, and just look at controlling/hiding in the system.

      1. First question - how to get in? All the usual techniques will work. Browser exploits are still common, even after years of hardening the IE and Firefox codebases. Plugin exploits (quicktime, acrobat, etc) even more so. Emailing out virus mails that appear to come from friends is still a very effective technique - we spent years training people to not trust emails from random people, only to have that advice subverted by having the emails come from friends. There are no restrictions on sending mail on Linux, nor reading from the users address book assuming they use client-side mail. If they use webmail the same techniques will work as on Windows.

        Some people might say, but Mike, it's hard to make a binary that works on all forms of Linux! In reality, it's not that hard. The basic loading/linking code and core libraries are the same across distributions. It's hard once you try to build real, interesting apps that provide GUIs and so on, but if you're willing to put in some testing (and modern malware is a professional operation, so why not) you can make the same binary work just fine on dozens of distros.

        Other people might say that it's complicated to run binaries on Linux, because you have to set the +x bit. I'll ignore the fact that I think Linux isn't ever going to get 33% market share with the current way of distributing software ... suffice it to say, that once you convince a user that you're legitimate and that they want your eCard (that's how this malware spreads), you can just give them a command to copy/paste into the "Run Program" dialog box.

      2. Once you're in, you want to do a few things. You want to download the rest of the trojan ... no problem with that ... maybe start sending mail ... again no problem ... what else? Maybe you want to drain the users bank account. The easiest way to do that is to install a browser extension that waits for the user to log in, and then scripts the web app. This has already been done on Windows/IE and isn't technically difficult - although it does require testing on the banks you want to target.

        What else? Stealing cookies is popular. Yep, we can do that. Maybe popping up "unkillable ads". Yes, X will let you do this.

      3. Next, you want to hide, to make yourself hard to get rid of. This is the part where people tend to assume Linux is more robust than Windows. Is it really? Well, firstly, you can do a decent job of hiding without root. To start with, try injecting yourself into a system process ... or start several copies of the same program, all of which watch each other and restart new copies if others are killed or paused. It exploits the fact that you can't send signals to groups of processes atomically. Adjust the users path in their startup scripts to let you override any binary you wish, and then use a user-mode rootkit technique to hide the fact that the file was modified. Or set yourself to startup in the KDE/GNOME config systems somehow (eg, as an invisible panel app).

        What if you want to store stuff on disk, and hide those files? Doing it with a kernel rootkit is easy enough, but what about without having access to kernel space? One way to do it is ptrace every process that might be used to explore the filesystem - like shells. You can intercept the syscalls of these programs before they reach the kernel in that way, and thus make files "disappear" from the command line, from Nautilus/Konqueror, or whatever other programs you want to do. If you're worried about the ptrace

      • ...suffice it to say, that once you convince a user that you're legitimate and that they want your eCard (that's how this malware spreads), you can just give them a command to copy/paste into the "Run Program" dialog box.

        Your post seems predicated upon the assumption that the means of compromise is a trojan. Right now, that is not the common case, especially for bots. While there are more types of trojans out there, each compromises a fairly small number of boxes. Most boxes by number are still compromised by automated worms that have no user interaction component to them.

        I think you're right that Linux is no more secure against trojans than Windows, maybe less so even, but you have to keep in mind that even if that is

        • by 0123456 ( 636235 )
          "I think you're right that Linux is no more secure against trojans than Windows"

          Most Windows users (at least on XP) run as root. Most linux users don't run as root. That's a heck of a lot more secure, at least in terms of losing control over your computer rather than just losing your files.
          • Most Windows users (at least on XP) run as root. Most linux users don't run as root. That's a heck of a lot more secure, at least in terms of losing control over your computer rather than just losing your files

            I was thinking of Vista, but assuming we're talking about WinXP, then in either case the bot has plenty of permission as the user to be malicious and send spam, participate in a DDoS, or steal user data. The one thing it can't do that it might want to is disable anti-virus. That is slightly harder on Linux or Vista than on WinXP, but once you're in it is just a matter of breaching one more layer with a local escalation, and those are not really uncommon on Linux (and absurdly common on Vista right now). O

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Tim C ( 15259 )
          Your post seems predicated upon the assumption that the means of compromise is a trojan. Right now, that is not the common case, especially for bots.

          Well, I can't say that I have any hard facts to back up my opinion, but I've always assumed the exact opposite. I don't see *anything* in my router/firewall logs. Either the attacks aren't happening, or they're stopped by my ISP; either way, they're not compromising any PCs (and I'd expect the ISP to advertise the extra protection if they were doing it)

          In contr
    • Social engineering works on the user, not on the operating system, and is likely to be about equally effective on any platform. The exception is when the social engineering relies on confusing the user. In this case, I'd see an advantage to MacOSX and Linux, which ask for permission a whole lot less than Windows (particularly Vista). A user who is used to clicking OK boxes is more vulnerable than one who is occasionally is asked to type a password for specific reasons.

      In cases where social engineering

    • From a non-technical point of view, I know someone who found all sorts of vulnerabilities in Windows. He couldn't patch them. He hates Microsoft's business tactics. He wrote viruses to exploit those vulnerabilities (the viruses usually did something like DDOS various Microsoft websites, print out "Microsoft is crap, stop using Windows" once a month, etc.). It's not just the installbase or the security of the system to take into account, it's also a) users' opinions of the system/creators (many Windows users
    • by prshaw ( 712950 )
      It would actually be much harder to successfully target an OS with less than probably 50% of the market, you might even need more then that to be worthwhile.

      But of the 3, if they had equal market share I think OS-X would loose out the most, and get targeted the most. Linux users tend to be a more technical group and Windows users are used to dealing with viruses. So those two groups for different reasons don't get infected as much. But OS-X users tend to feel as secure as Linux, but don't always have the sk
    • well that's one of the problems is the playing field isn't level and here's some of my thoughts on it;

      1. Linux is server orientated, all processes are treated equal unless nice'd, that means that as my Linux 'puter gets loaded with malware processes I'd notice it lagging sooner or later; vs. Windows that is desktop orientated, my Vista machine can have SETI@home running both core at 100% and I don't notice it. Other Vista machines that are under-spec'd feel sluggish and lag at 100% idle; because all emphasi
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I really do think it is time to fight fire with fire. If these things report to a server then make that IP public and then blast it off the internet.

    After all I am entitled to use reasonable force to protect my person. Why can't I use the electronic equivalent with these scum bags.

    Sure it is a moving target but the key to smashing spam is to push up the marginal cost to the spammer.
    • by SoupIsGoodFood_42 ( 521389 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @07:18PM (#21801134)
      Because then people like you end up blasting legit people off the internet by mistake and ignore the problem as collateral damage?
      • by nurb432 ( 527695 )
        Or worse, you get some large company 'joe jobbed' out of existence for a few days and lose millions in sales.

        Hmm good blackmail tactic tho.
    • I really do think it is time to fight fire with fire. If these things report to a server then make that IP public and then blast it off the internet.

      Unfortunately the spammer/malware author usually doesn't use their own servers, pipes, routing equipment, etc...
      It's usually hosted at some facility and your retaliation would more than likely harm other customers.

      Same with home PCs. If you tried to take down my 8/1 Mb Comcast connection you might succeed if you have a faster connection. Or alternativel
    • I think we're not allowed to do that for the same reason lynching isn't allowed...
    • What about the machines that these IP addresses resolve to? Trojans would be very easy to defeat if all of them pointed to the one address that is the perpetrator. However, a lot of times these addresses are other "innocent" machines, like yours, that are infected and are just another go-between. It may just be that you never would see the perpetrator's IP address, and they're simply using backdoors on other networks.

      Now, given the other machines are infected, you would indeed be a criminal yourself, as
    • by jmauro ( 32523 )
      Most of them use things like IRC or other peer-to-peer systems to communicate so knocking the main controller off the internet would only temporary disable the control of the system. The writers have learned through repeated attempts to do what you suggest to find a way around the issues of being temporary knocked offline.
  • Scary... (Score:1, Troll)

    by gmuslera ( 3436 )
    thats the 1st that comes to my mind when i see how sophisticated and commercial had become the bad guys. There have been a lot of stories regarding this kind of subject in the last months/years, and internet is becoming more and more like a minefield.

    I know that this one is pretty dependant on Windows (not only is the easy target, because users, numbers and the "security" of the system/browser present there), but i bet that some in that development can be translated to unix/mac systems (as is the user the o
    • ...but i bet that some in that development can be translated to unix/mac systems (as is the user the one that mainly installs it, think in i.e. when was corrupted the SquirrelMail repository, if someone send spams away to make people to download it before it gets catched, and that installs in fact a trojan with that functionality).

      Just to clarify, while there are lots of different trojans including those for Mac/Linux and they are in the wild, trojans are still not he biggest threat. While there are more trojans than worms, worms still compromise more machines than trojans and worms that exploit network services or applications, with no user interaction, are still the most common cause of a compromise; especially for zombies in a botnet.

      • by prshaw ( 712950 )
        Are you sure that worms are a bigger threat than trojans?

        I have not heard of a worm causing serious problems in a while (some are still there, but not causing any real damage anymore). (Note, Storm Worm is NOT a worm, it is a trojan).

        Trojans, click happy users, and some good social engineering seem to be the main way these botnets are keeping their sizes.

        What worms have you heard of that are in the wild now causing problems?
        • Are you sure that worms are a bigger threat than trojans?

          The numbers aren't in for 2007 yet. We'll probably see them mid-january. For 2006, however, most exploits were the result of worms with no user interaction by a significant margin. Maybe this is changing, but I doubt that has happened yet. A lot of security people tend to focus a lot on threats that might affect them, like their network of WinXP SP2 systems, and forget that there is still a large ecosystem of older Windows systems out there that make up the lion's share of boxes being compromised.

          What worms have you heard of that are in the wild now causing problems?

          Over

  • 21st century war (Score:3, Insightful)

    by brit74 ( 831798 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @07:03PM (#21801042)
    This enables the Pushdo author to limit distribution of any one of the [421 different] malware loads from infecting users located in a particular country, or provides the ability to target a specific country or countries with a specific payload.

    I can't help but think a lot of malware creators will get rich in the 21st century when governments pay them to attack countries they are at war with - either destroying their computer infrastructure, or acting as spies.
    • by zopf ( 897522 )
      More frightening, I think, is that a botnet operator could simulate an attack from a foreign country, and thus manipulate the geopolitical climate. Imagine that the USA and Russia were on shaky terms after some kind of conflict... a malicious botnet operator could summon computers known to be within certain regions of Russia (or even select for those behind military/state IPs) and then target them on US defense networks. The US might then be forced to step into military action, assuming that they were und
  • by phantomcircuit ( 938963 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @07:55PM (#21801382) Homepage
    My question is simple, How can the command and control servers for botnets stay up?

    Wouldn't their hosting provider and/or IP block owner not want to end up on blacklists and thus kick them off, thus cutting off all infected systems from further contact.
    • by KillerBob ( 217953 ) on Sunday December 23, 2007 @08:30PM (#21801602)
      IRC... have a master channel, and configure the virus so it's able to connect to a slave channel and receive commands, or connect to the master channel and relay commands to its slave channel. Program the bot/virus so that it connects to a non-persistent "slave" channel. If it's automatically given moderator status, then it's the first bot in the channel, so it connects to the master channel and functions as a command/control herder. If it doesn't automatically get mod rights, then it functions as a slave and actually does the dirty work.

      And by using a wide open IRC server, of which there's plenty, it's virtually impossible to shut down the network. All the main controller has to do is connect to his "master" control channel periodically to send out commands, and the rest of the herding gets done by his deputies.
      • Well that sounds great but what happens when all of the IRC servers shut them out?

        Now all of the clients are cut off from the master and have no way of connecting back.
        • Well that sounds great but what happens when all of the IRC servers shut them out?

          You're right... when the IRC servers shut them out, you're safe. But they can't exactly IP ban every client that's infected with the virus.... there's far too many. The servers could block the channels, but how would they know they've got all of them? Granted, all they have to do is block the main control channel, but that would require actually watching the traffic... you have any idea how many logs they'd have to go through

    • That one's easy. Enter Fast Flux [wikipedia.org].
      • Fast Flux is just a very fast round robin. The purchase of domain names is still necessary. Anyways why would they let someone have thousands of A name records and change them every few seconds?
    • I'll do one better - use P2P and cryptography. The botnet administrator has a private key and embeds his public key into the malware. Then he signs his commands with his private key and distributes them to an infected host. The infected hosts keep track of other infected hosts (such as those that they infected) and distribute the message to those hosts.

      Better yet, add a timecode to the signature to prevent replay attacks. And write the malware to screw your system over if you try to change the clock.

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