Dancho Danchev's Blog - Mind Streams of Information Security Knowledge

In the overwhelming sea of information, access to timely, insightful and independent open-source intelligence (OSINT) analyses is crucial for maintaining the necessary situational awareness to stay on the top of emerging security threats. This blog covers trends and fads, tactics and strategies, intersecting with third-party research, speculations and real-time CYBERINT assessments, all packed with sarcastic attitude

Monday, June 04, 2007

g0t XSSed?

Following previous posts on XSSing The Planet and XSS Vulnerabilities in E-banking Sites, here's a full disclosure project that's basically categorizing user-submitted XSS vulnerabilities by pagerank/government/public entity, with mirrored XSSed pages.

Even a .secured TLD name is nothing more than a false feeling of security with phishers still loading content from E-banking providers' sites, and actively exploiting XSS vulnerabilities to make their scams use the bank's site. Therefore from a business development perspective you ought to realize that overperforming in a developing market segment, is sometimes more profitable than being a pioneer with an idea the market's not willing to anticipate for the time being -- perhaps for the best.
- June 04, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Data Breach Sample Letters of Notification

Dear customer, to ensure your satisfaction with our quality services we're notifying you that our inability to protect your sensitive data has resulted in its leakage on the World Wide Web thus, stay tuned for possible identity theft and spending the next couple of years explaining how it wasn’t you who bought that luxurious yacht your bank wants you to pay for. By the time our stolen laptops get connected to the Internet -- which we doubt anyway -- they will phone back helping us locate them which doesn’t mean we didn’t breach the confidentiality of your personal information, and are just trying to be socially responsible in the time of notification.

Sincerely,
Your favorite and customer-friendly breached retailer

Perhaps the most comprehensive archive of scanned data breach letters of notification on U.S based companies, I've come across to so far. Well worth going through in case you wonder on what tone does a breached company use to maintain its weakened brand image, and to prevent a PR disaster.

Related posts:
To report, or not to report?
Personal Data Security Breaches - 2000/2005
A Chart of Personal Data Security Breaches 2005-2006
Getting paid for getting hacked
- June 04, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Thursday, May 31, 2007

MSN Spamming Bot

An image is sometimes worth a thousand words. This is a screenshot of infected bots spreading spam messages at MSN via typical !spam IRC based command and control. And here's a related article about malware on IM networks as well:

"It is not clear exactly why the number of IM attacks is increasing, but security researchers have their theories. Don Montgomery, vice president of marketing at Akonix, speculated the increase in the number of attacks reflects the increase in the use of instant messaging, particularly on corporate networks. "IM is becoming favored over e-mail as a distribution vector for malware as a result of e-mail security now being employed by 75 percent or more of companies, while IM security is only employed by 15 to 20 percent of companies," Montgomery said. "The hackers are simply turning to the open door."

Two options remain highly lucrative. Either someone’s spamming p3n1$ enlargement propositions and directing to a spam site, or the social engineering efforts aim at visiting an exploit hosting site. No more direct .pif; .scr; or .exe propositions in plain simple text, what’s exploited is mostly client side vulnerabilities and redirectors to break the ice. IM threats stats courtesy of Symantec's IMlogic and here’s a related post regarding the acquisition of the company with Symantec anticipating the emergence of this market segment and investing in it. IM propagation has it cyclical patterns which like pretty much all other propagation vectors reaching a mature level starts getting at least partly replaced by other ways of propagation.
- May 31, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

The WebAttacker in Action

Interesting to see that the WebAttacker kit can still be seen in the wild. Here are the redirectors in action :

Input URL: _http://rulife.info/traffic/go.php?sid=1
Effective URL: _http://greencunt.org/crap/index.php
Responding IP: 203.223.159.110
Name Lookup Time: 1.290261
Total Retrieval Time: 5.987628

=> _http://rulife.info/traffic/go.php?sid=1
=> _http://xorry.org/backup/atds/out.php?s_id=1
=> _http://greencunt.org/crap/index.php

What follows is the (sandboxed) infection : file: Write C:\Program Files\Internet Explorer\IEXPLORE.EXE -> C:\sysykiz.exe

Several more URLs are to be found at the "green" domain as well :
_http://greencunt.org/anna/fout.php
_http://greencunt.org/spl1/index.php

Despite that the tool is outdated compared to mature malware platforms and exploitation kits which I'll be covering in upcoming posts, the leak of its source code made it easy for someone to tweak it for their personal needs and simply feed with undetectable binaries, new vulnerabilities, and newly registered domains -- even hijacked ones through web application vulnerabilities for instance.

In case you're interested in a proof that attackers are still successfully infecting victims by using vulnerabilities for which patches have been released months ago, here's another URL that's exploiting two vulnerabilities at once namely :

MDAC ActiveX code execution (CVE-2006-0003)
IE COM CreateObject Code Execution (MS06-042)

The domain in question is - _http://www.avvcc.com and _http://www.avvcc.com/lineage/djyx.htm

Related posts:
RootLauncher Kit
Nuclear Grabber Kit
Shots from the Malicious Wild West - Sample Seven
Shots from the Malicious Wild West - Sample Six
Shots from the Malicious Wild West - Sample Five
Shots from the Malicious Wild West - Sample Four
Shots from the Malicious Wild West - Sample Three
Shots from the Malicious Wild West - Sample Two
Shots from the Malicious Wild West - Sample One
- May 30, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

The Revenge of the Waitress

Think your scrooge tips will achieve their effect? Think twice but don't put the emphasis on underpaid waitresses, rather on the overall availability of credit card data reading devices as well as their vulnerability to such readers. Here's a video of another waitress clonning credit cards on the fly :

"A telltale clue that helped the restaurant and investigators zero in on the waitress: She would make quick visits to the restroom after picking up customers' charge cards, apparently to swipe them through a palm-sized device that recorded the confidential numbers."
- May 30, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Reverse Engineering the ANI Vulnerability

Informative video analyzing the ANI cursor vulnerability, part of the Google TechTalks series.

"Alex Sotirov is a vulnerability engineer at determina. He will discuss some latest techniques in reverse engineering software to find vulnerabilities. Particularly, he'll discuss his technique that lead him to find the ANI bug (a critical new bug in WinXP and Vista)."


- May 30, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Phrack Magazine's Latest Issue

Phrack is back believe it or not with its latest Issue 64 released two days ago. The style is still so old-school, so authentic it makes you remember extraordinary Web 1.0 experiences. Articles of notice I went through so far : "A brief history of the Underground scene" ; "Blind TCP/IP hijacking is still alive" ; and "The art of Exploitation: come back on an exploit". Dazzling already :

"In the last decade, Phrack took a very annoying industry-oriented editorial policy and the original spirit was in our opinion not respected. The good old school spirit as we like had somehow disappeared from the process of creating the magazine. That is why the underground got split with a major dispute, as some part of the scene was unhappy with this new way of publishing. We clearly needed to bring together again all the relevant parties around the spirit of hacking and the values that make the Underground. The Underground is neither about making the industry richer by publishing exploits or 0day information, nor distributing hacklogs of whitehats on the Internet, but to go further the limits of technology ever and ever, in a big wave of learning and sharing with the people ready to embrace it. This is not our war to fight peoples doing this for money but we have to clearly show our difference."
- May 29, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Google Hacking for Vulnerabilities

Tools like these are a clear indication in the interest of gathering targets through google hacking techniques and SQL injecting them using a single tool. What’s important to note is that, instead of scanning the target's web server in an automated fashion thus, increasing the potential of detecting your malicious requests in this case the attack vectors are already known even cached on a search engines' servers. Perhaps a good time to set up a google hacking or PHP deception honeypot, make sure google crawls it and either gather first hand statistics, or deceive at your best. A paper released under the Know Your Enemy series comments on the concept of search engines' reconnaissance :

"Below we give the exploits we have seen against our honeypots and where possible an estimate of the number of users for each piece of software. The estimates are obtained by checking the number of Google search results returned for a given page in a website, for example searching for '"powered by PHPBB" inurl:viewtopic.php' suggests there are around 1.5 million installations of PHPBB indexed by Google."

Malware using search engines to build its hit lists is nothing new and it's the Santy worm and perhaps even the JS/Yamanner worm I have in mind. Worms like these are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to malware because their successful intrusions act as a propagation vector for malware exes, exploits embedded pages, and hosting of phishing sites. In case you remember, over an year ago New Zealand started a nation wide google hacking security audit aiming to not just build awareness on the potential security issues, but to also, measure the country's susceptibility to google hacking which they claim is the highest in the world. If you don’t take care of your web application vulnerabilities someone else will, and your organization wouldn’t even have "the privilege" of getting exploited by an advanced attacker, but by a script kiddie making your server open a reverse shell back to them in between everything else.
- May 29, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Microsoft's Forefront Ad Campaign

The introduction of Microsoft's Forefront security solutions is already backed up by a huge ad campaign that can be seen on the majority of tech-news portals. The campaign is however lacking a consistent vision to communicate the benefits and main differentiation points -- if any -- of the product, and is barely informing that it exists in a not so creative way :

There's nothing in Forefront that really makes it notably better or worse than any other solutions that are already in the marketplace. However, the Microsoft name may be sufficient for it to steal market share, and a better integration with other Microsoft solutions…is likely to be a bit of a differentiator,” said Quin. Faced with increasing competition from Microsoft, Symantec Corp. questioned Microsoft's ability to effectively protect enterprise customers.

Trying to be witty too much while fighting ninjas and aliens often results in your ad campaign "clowning" in the eyes of a prospective customer. Security is indeed a cosmic phenomenon for Microsoft, an unexplained pseudo-randomly generated event that's continuing to be researched and analyzed for generations to come. Can they achieve desirable results? Will penetration pricing help? And will the ad agency that got commisioned with the ad campaign come up with a bit of a more creative psychological imagination the next time?

A pure example of an acquisition-to-solution strategy compared to AOLs licensing of a reputable AV vendor's technology, in order for them to enter the market segment as well.
- May 23, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Jihadists' Anonymous Internet Surfing Preferences

Jihadists are logically not just interested in encryption and steganography but also, in ways to anonymize their web surfing activities as much as possible. A wannabe jihadist whose tips and recommendations have gained him a lot of reputation around the forums I follow, recently came up with an in-depth article on recommended and reviewed IP cloaking services with direct download links in between. It makes stats like these questionable to a certain extend as I've already pointed out. Among the IP cloaking tools reviewed are :
- Steganos Internet Anonym Pro
- Hide IP Platinum 3.1
- Proxy Switcher Pro
- Invisible Browsing v5.0.52

TOR is, of course, mentioned as well but at the bottom of the article citing performance issues compared to commercial solutions. IP decloaking is not even considered as a concept.
- May 23, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Counter Espionage Tips from the Cold War

There's nothing old-fashioned in short films like these representing possible techniques used by intelligence services while recruiting - "Cold War counter-spy instructional film created to convince government officials traveling with top secret info to watch their backs. Watch hapless G-men get seduced and setup for blackmail by treacherous Soviet she-spies"



And despite that today's perception of sexy she-spies has evolved proportionally with the technological advances in espionage, some of the tips are still emphasizing on the basics.
- May 23, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

A Client Application for "Secure" E-banking?

This is perhaps the second product concept myopia right after the lie detection software for text comminations I come across to recently. Remember a previous post heading in the opposite direction, where a bank was trying to rebuild confidence in the most abused phishing medium - the email - to keep in touch with its customers? Here's another company that's betting on a third-party client application to solve the problem of secure E-banking totally falling victim in the secure channel communication myopia one that I think has nothing to do with reality when it comes to the success of phishing :

"Here’s how Armored Online works: A company, such as a financial institution or online retailer, offers a downloadable client to customers through its website. That client then gives the customer’s computer a secure channel with which to communicate and transact with the company. Its Java-based browser is locked down, meaning it won’t accept any plug-ins, like cookies used by criminals. What’s more, the client can only “talk” to the server at the bank or online store. “It’s like iTunes for banks,” Mr. Sowerby said."

The attack of the disabled cookies? Not really, so be realistic. Coming up with a third-party application as the cornerstone of E-banking security directly conflicts with E-banking's biggest benefit - flexibility due to the compatibility with the most popular browsers. So you'd rather focus on the current situation - Brandjacking instead of re-inventing the SSL wheel -- as a matter of fact the Gozi trojan and the Nuclear Grabber are quite comfortable with SSL as they bypass it entirely. Even worse, a trojanized copy of the program will emerge given it receives any acceptance at all. And if banks start embracing it -- don't -- we can easily start talking about DRM enabled E-banking where, both, banks and customers will turn into virtual hostages to a third-party application trying to reboot the market for anti-phishing services, totally forgetting the problem is not in the lack of unencrypted transactions as no one is sniffing the credentials, but pushing fake sites instead of letting customers pull the sites for themselves.

Don't disrupt in irrelevance.
- May 22, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

A Malware Loader For Sale

Continuing the Shots from the Malicious Wild West series and the yet another malware tool in the wild posts, here’s a recently advertised malware loader. Polymorphism, built in packing functions and the ability to set an interval for loading yet another executable at a URL or a URL redirector, DIY firewalls unloading techniques, pretty much anything ugly is in place -- as usual. The loader's source code is currently available for $150, undetected bots go for $15 per piece. Malware on demand in principle, or malicious economies of scale?
- May 22, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Monday, May 21, 2007

MySpace's Sex Offenders Problem

MySpace, being one of the most popular social networking sites is always under fire on its efforts to combat known child offenders registering and using its database to find what they're looking for. The problem isn’t MySpace as a faciliator for such type of communications but the vast amounts of personal information -- future contact points -- kids publish about themselves online, not knowing that on the Internet anyone can be a dog and most importantly, parents loosing the emotional connection with their kids and making it easier for someone to break the ice and establish trust.

Several months ago, funded by nothing more but his common sense Kevin Poulsen gathered name data from the U.S public child offenders registry and found positive results with people -- thankfully -- stupid enough to use their real names. And while they wouldn't do it again the next time instead of making it easier to aggregate the data, a CAPTCHA to limit such automatic activities was implemented. Don't blame MySpace blame bureaucracy. Meanwhile, here's an article on U.S authorities demanding that MySpace provide data on identified and removed known child offenders -- they agreed :

"MySpace agreed Monday to provide the information to all states after some members of the group filed subpoenas or took other legal actions to demand it. The company said last week such efforts were required under the federal Electronic Communications Privacy Act before it could legally release the data."Different states are going about it different ways," said Noelle Talley, spokeswoman for Cooper, who filed a "civil investigative demand" for the information. Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal used a subpoena that "compels this information right away - within hours, not weeks, without delay - because it is vital to protecting children," he said."

If protecting children is vital, remove the CAPTCHA so everyone knowing how to aggregate and tweak the data will come up with far more sophisticated stats than the ones currently available. Actual results too. Next time it would become harder to track them, so don’t count on measures like these instead, ensure naughty conversations aren’t taking place at all. Makes me wonder one thing - should you be filtering known child offenders on the Internet perhaps a futile attempt given the pseudo-personalities they could establish, or at the ISP level and put them under surveillance right from the very beginning? Of course child offenders should not have unmonitored access to the Internet so rethink the basics.

Related posts:
Registered Sex Offenders on MySpace
IMSafer Now MySpace Compatible
- May 21, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Tricking a Laptop's Fingerprint Authentication

The joys of fingerprint biometrics with a duplicate fingerprint of the original.

- May 19, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Friday, May 18, 2007

Commercializing Mobile Malware

Visionary enough, I predicted this over an year ago, and despite that for the time being there are only two publicly known pieces of mobile malware sending sms messages from the infected devices to premium numbers, it's an emerging trend for customers and mobile operators to keep an eye on :

"After installation, the Viver trojans immediately start sending SMS messages to premium-rate numbers. The messages are sent with proper international area codes, so they are able to reach the correct destination even when activated outside Russia. We've already seen for-profit malware in mobile devices: Wesber.A and Redbrowser are Java Midlet trojans that try to send messages to Russian premium-rate numbers. But these trojans require user acceptance per each message and are able to send messages correctly only inside Russia."

Some comments I made back then :

"The number and penetration of mobile devices greatly outpaces that of the PCs. Malware authors are actively experimenting and of course, progressing with their research on mobile malware. The growing monetization of mobile devices, that is generating revenues out of users and their veto power on certain occasions, would result in more development in this area by malicious authors. SPIM would also emerge with authors adapting their malware for gathering numbers. Mobile malware is also starting to carry malicious payload. Building awareness on the the issue, given the research already done by several vendors, would be a wise idea."

Something else to think about is related to Europe’s most recent mega-music event Eurovision and the sms voting power that, given enough infected mobile devices are in place the results could change pretty fast if you’re following my thoughts. Thankfully, compared to zombie networks making it possible to do intelligence and espionage tweaks given the large infected population, we still cannot talk about mobile botnets. The most juicy target for the time being however, remains the rise mobile banking.

Another comment I made a while ago :

"Malware authors indeed have financial incentives to futher continue recompling publicly available PoC mobile malware source code, and it's the purchasing/identification features phones, opening a car with an SMS, opening a door with an SMS, purchasing over an SMS or direct barcode scanning, mobile impersonation scams, harvesting phone numbers of infected victims, as well as unknowingly interacting with premium numbers are the things about to get directly abused -- efficiently and automatically."

Related posts:
Proof of Concept Symbian Malware Courtesy of the Academic World
Mobile Devices Hacking Through a Suitcase
- May 18, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Yet Another Malware Cryptor In the Wild

Just stumbled upon a newly released cryptor in the wild, and as I pointed out in a previous post related to yet another cryptor, they're signature-based malware scanning's worst enemy. By the time AV vendors obtain a sample and analyze the routines they use, unless an IPS solution is in place, and end user friendly perimeter defense detecting the bot-ization of the host are in place - an infection occurs.

What's the big picture? It's launching a denial of service attack on anti virus vendors' labs in the form of distributing couple of hundred malware samples - future family members of a malware group. Polymorphism encrypting routines are nothing new, but with DIY cryptors in the wild the result can be quite successful even for copy cats:

"Another example is the Stration family of malware, responsible for worms and other forms of malware in late 2006. “Stration was changing so quickly—the encryption packaging, the compiler, everything. We saw up to 300 variants in a single day,” says Ron O’Brien, senior security analyst at anti-malware vendor Sophos."

File size: 4608 bytes
MD5: 406e3a1443ec617f2c968a957a460f10
SHA1: 187abe8cec588b53126afbe8e600379a3bac2321
- May 17, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Corporate Espionage Through Botnets

Following my previous post on OSINT Through Botnets, here's a company that's categorizing Fortune 500 companies whose networks are heavily polluted with malware infected hosts :

"Support Intelligence (SI), a network security company in San Francisco, has been running what it called "30 Days of Bots," featuring corporate networks infected with spam-churning bots. It began analyzing data in February, monitoring 10,000 domains that plow data into a trap much like a fishnet, except the intelligence in the data is designed to determine what information to keep by looking for spam. In total, SI analyzed traffic from more than 100 sources, including the aforementioned spam traps."

Considering the possibility for gathering open source intelligence through military and government infected PCs only, it is logical to conclude that a specific company can be targeted on the basis of the already infected hosts on its network as well. Think about it. For the time being, a botnet's master doesn't really care if it's a military or Fortune 500 company that's infected as long as spam, phishing and malware goes out of these hosts. But passive corporate espionage in the form of intercepting the traffic going out of a specific company's network shouldn't be excluded as an opportunity.
- May 16, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

Visual Script Obfuscation

We often talk and deobfuscate scripts aiming to hide their real and often malicious intentions. But what if malicious attackers have become so efficient in their obfuscation, that they decide to show some JAPH style in order to make them harder to analyze by visually obfuscating the scripts as you can see here?
- May 16, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com

The Jihadist Security Encyclopedia

A month ago, the Media Jihad Battalion started distributing a 118 pages long encyclopedia on anything starting from secure communications to keywords not to search for as they'll raise an early warning system alarm. The front cover is so Blade's style, but the PSYOPS motive is highly influential. Here's a translated table of contents and the original version attached.
- May 16, 2007 No comments:
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com
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Dancho Danchev
Independent Security Consultancy, Threat Intelligence Analysis (OSINT/Cyber Counter Intelligence) and Competitive Intelligence research on demand. Insightful, unbiased, and client-tailored assessments, neatly communicated in the form of interactive reports - because anticipating the emerging threatscape is what shapes the big picture at the end of the day. Approach me at dancho.danchev@hush.com
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  • Underground Search Engine
  • United Kingdom
  • University ID Card
  • Vasil Moev Gachevski
  • Vault 7
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  • Vertex Net Loader
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  • Virtual Reality
  • Virtual Reality Social Network
  • Virtual World
  • Virus
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  • Virus Map
  • Virus Recovery Button
  • Viruses
  • VirusTotal
  • Visa
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  • Visualization
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  • VoIP
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  • Vulnerability Broker
  • War Driving
  • War Games
  • Weapon Systems
  • Web 2.0
  • Web Application Worm
  • Web Crawler
  • Web Inject
  • Web Proxy Service
  • Web Shells
  • Web Site Defacement
  • Web Site Defacement Groups
  • Webroot
  • WHGDG
  • WhoisXML API
  • WhoisXML API Jabber ZeuS Gang
  • Wireless
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  • Wireless Internet
  • Wiretapping
  • WMF Vulnerability
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  • Yahoo
  • Yaroslav Vasinskyi
  • Yavor Kolev
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