Archive for the ‘Spyware’ Category

Bancos Dropper

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

ThreatFire users in Brazil are being attacked with yet another Bancos dropper/downloader.

The source of the file, “jk982732-2309.zip”, which extracts simply to an aspack’ed “jk982732-2309.exe”, is not entirely clear at this point. If any of our users have seen this file prevented on their desktop, please contact us on the forums or here in the comments with some information on its source and any IM messages or email related to this file.

A dead giveaway that something is unusual is the “Google Inc” file company name property, along with the Microsoft MSN butterfly icon:

Another giveaway that something is amiss is that the file also attempts to download components from free web hosting site “nofeehost.com” that masquerade as Brazilian security Buster Browser Defense components.

Any further information from users would be welcome.

MS09-002 ITW Exploit

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

The IE7 vulnerability recently patched by Microsoft’s MS09-002 is being exploited in the wild. The ThreatFire community is not seeing much of the attack, but ThreatFire prevents attacks against the memory corruption (referenced in CVE-2009-0075) in Internet Explorer 7’s loaded mshtml.dll module just the same. We expect to see much more of this exploit code in the near future.

Security researcher Paul Ferguson speculated that the original targeted attack, in which a Word document was sent to a select group of individuals, was similar to previous attacks targeting pro-Tibetan groups:
“Although Ferguson does not know who wrote the attack code, he said that it looks similar to software that was sent to pro-Tibetan groups about a year ago, apparently for the purpose of intelligence gathering…Whether this will lead to more widespread Internet Explorer attacks is unclear, Ferguson said.”

The exploit code itself is beginning to spread and has shown up on additional servers in the Pacific rim. While the original attack may have been very targeted, the exploit code itself looks the same. Even variable and function names remain the same across the exploit pages we’ve seen.
The shellcode and the delivered malware executables differ altogether across servers. In one case, the writers jumped through hoops to complete some stable download and execute shellcode, and in another, the writers added some unusual loops to download “menu.dat” to the user’s temp directory and execute it as “U.exe”.
The original executable was not packed and dropped a dll that phoned data over an encrypted session to a server hosted in China. The second, U.exe, is a downloader packed with a somewhat common compressor known as nPack.
So it appears that different groups already are using the exploit, leading us to believe that this reliable and effective exploit code will continue to spread in the wild.

Be sure to update your Windows system if you have not done so already.

Ongoing Waledac Botnet and Spam Operation

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

Creating, operating and expanding the Waledac botnet is an ongoing effort, similar to the Storm operation that had dwindled this past year.

The Waledac operators have automated a fairly predictable registration and setup of their malicious web sites and corresponding online pharmaceutical sites reported as fraudulent. They are abusing fast flux dns at an impressive rate as well.
DO NOT VISIT THESE SITES. THEY ARE MALICIOUS AND MAY INFECT YOUR SYSTEM IF YOU CHOOSE TO VISIT THEM WITH A WEB BROWSER. Here are a few that were registered and set up this morning. Be aware that this spamming/botnet operation is an ongoing one:
hxxp://topgreetingsite.com
hxxp://www.greetingsupersite.com
hxxp://www.greetingcardgarb.com
hxxp://greetingcardcalendar.com
hxxp://directchristmasgift.com

You get the idea. Do not fall for the links being spammed out in email messages as ecard deliveries and do not fall for the current “card.exe” being distributed.