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April 10, 2009

Conficker Update: Creating Spam-Spewing Drones?

Filed under: Antivirus, Malware, Security, spam, viruses — admin @ 8:06 pm
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More than a week after its April 1 deadline, the Conficker C worm released an update that could activate the botnet to deliver spam and turn infected PCs into zombies.
Researchers say that the latest update could include a connection between the Conficker worm to the active spam bot W32.Waledac. Specifically, researchers said they have seen circumstantial evidence that the latest strain of Conficker, known as Downadup E, might drop a Waledac binary on machines infected with Conficker C. That binary is designed to steal information and turn infected PCs into spam-spewing drones under the control of the malware authors, experts say.

“We got a first look at the payload and we’re still looking at this one, a worm or Trojan called Waledac associated with tons of spam,” said Vincent Weafer, vice president of Symantec (NSDQ:SYMC) Security Response. “Ultimately it’s about information stealing.”

More Conficker updates could include widespread distribution of Trojans, keystroke loggers and other malware designed to grab user credentials and steal personal and financial information later down the road, Weafer said. “And then what’s left is a very robust botnet,” he added.

April 1 marked the day the Conficker worm was scheduled to undergo an update that provided a new domain generation algorithm allowing the infected computers to “call home” to about 500 of the 50,000 newly generated domains, possibly for new instructions.

The new strain of the Conficker worm updates machines infected with Conficker C to the new strain, known as Downadup E via peer-to-peer techniques.

Researchers said that they’ve seen a few differentiators from the previous Conficker C.

The updated Conficker prefers to travel through peer-to-peer networks to distribute its new version E. However, researchers say that the new sample doesn’t appear to include new infection vectors that might allow it to propagate faster or onto new machines.

The latest version also incorporates a previously unseen self-removal functionality that is programmed with the ability to eliminate itself from infected hosts on May 3, and reaches out to a new list of high-profile domains.

Before its update April 1, Conficker C was renowned for exhibiting an array of sophisticated self-preservation techniques, which included blocking access to security vendor sites, dodging numerous antivirus products, and disabling Windows automatic updates. In addition, Conficker C has the ability to patch its own vulnerability once it has infected a machine, presumably to prevent competing malware from attacking the same host.

The earliest Conficker variants, Conficker B, and its predecessor Conficker A, had unique abilities to replicate and spread rapidly, infecting millions of PCs with techniques that ranged from brute force password guessing to transmission through USB sticks and peer-to-peer networks. Experts say that the highest rates of infections were found primarily in Latin America and other markets that rely on pirated Windows software, which doesn’t receive security updates.

Meanwhile, the entire upgrade is anticipated to take weeks to months, Weafer said.

“We describe this as step five of a 1,000-step chess match. This is going to go on for a while,” Weafer said. “This is not going to be an overnight upgrade.”

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February 10, 2009

Email Alert - New Spam Threat

Filed under: Computer Advice, Emails, Malware, Security, spam — admin @ 4:59 pm
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You may be aware of the debate going on in this country over the development of a stimulus package to aid in our economic recovery.  Unfortunately all of those dedicated spammers out there are using this as an opportunity to defraud the general public.  There are now emails circulating that appear to be from the US Internal Revenue Service and promising an “Economic Stimulus Payment”.    They are designed to facilitate the theft of your identity.  They generally contain links to online forms where you will be asked to submit personal information or they will ask you to reply to the email with sensitive information.  They may appear authentic as they include official looking seals however the IRS other US federal agencies never make unsolicited contact with citizens via email.

 If you receive one of these messages, delete it immediately.  Do not reply to it or click on any links in the body of the message.

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November 22, 2008

Huge drop in spam as McColo closes

Filed under: General, Uncategorized, spam — Tags: — admin @ 8:13 am
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If you’ve noticed that your spam load has been a little lighter of late, you’ve got one company to thank for it: McColo, a spam-friendly hosting company that shut down early this week.

While you might not think that a single company could be responsible for too much of the Internet’s sewage, you’d be surprised: according to figures from security vendor MXLogic quoted by CNet world spam volume is down by approximately 50 percent – all from that one host.

Benny Ng, marketing director of McColo’s main upstream provider Hurricane Electric, is credited with pulling the plug on the company’s main source of bandwidth – although why it took him quite so long is another matter entirely.

Much of the investigative work that resulted in the spam sewer being plugged was performed, perhaps surprisngly, by Brian Krebs of the Washington Post. Krebs claims that the company, which was hosting command and control servers for hordes of virus-infected Windows machines worldwide, could be responsible for the co-ordination of up to 75 percent of all spam.

While that figure might be a little on the high side, anti-spam outfit IronPort claims that the McColo shutdown resulted in “a drop of almost 2/3 of overall spam volume, correlating with a drop in IronPort’s SenderBase queries” - a dip the company initially thought was due to a technical problem.

Sadly, the reprieve is likely to be temporary: IronPort’s Nilesh Bhandari says his company is seeing a “slow recovery” by the spammers as they relocate the botnet servers to new hosts, and his company “fully [expects] this to recover completely, and to go into the highest spam period ever during the holiday season.” The message is clear: enjoy the quiet while it lasts.

Have you noticed a drop in your own personal spam feed, or have the pill pushers and porn merchants been as busy as ever making sure you don’t miss a single shill? Share your thoughts over in the forums.

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