Friday, November 16, 2007

Lonely Polina's Secret

Just as I've been monitoring lots of spam that's using Geocities redirectors, yesterday Nicholas posted some details on a malware campaign using Geocities pages as redirectors, and Roderick Ordonez acknowledged the same. Original Geocities URLs used : geocities.com/MediciChavez7861 (active) ; geocities.com/IliseNkrumah2 (down) ; geocities.com/GounodNanon5 (down). Original message of the spam campaign :

"Hallo! Meine Name ist Polina. Ich bin Studentin und Ich habe zur Germany zu lernen angekommen . Ich suche mich den Freund und der Sex-Partner. Aller dass Ich will es ist ein guter Mann. Sie sollen ernst, sicher, klug sein. Geben Sie mich zu wissen wenn Sie wollen mit mir treffen. Ebenso konnen Sie einfach mein Freund sein. Sie konnen meine Fotos auf meiner Seite sehen: geocities.com/MediciChavez7861 BITTE, NURR DIE ERNSTE Vorschlages. KUSSE, POLINA"

The fake lonely German student Polina was also accessible from other URLs as well - ThePagesBargain.ru/polina; dibopservice.com, both now down as well as the main 58.65.238.36/polina URL which is forwarding to baby.com in an attempt to cover up the campaign -- you wish. Internal pages within the IP are still accessible - 58.65.238.36/index2_files/index3.htm; 58.65.238.36/index2_files/index.htm, and so is the malware itself - 58.65.238.36/iPIX-install.exe.

Malware campaigners are not just setting objectives and achieving them, they're also evaluating the results and drawing conclusions on how to improve the next campaign. Back in January, 2006, I emphasized on the emerging trend of localization in respect to malware, take for instance the release of a trojan in an open source form so that hacking groups from different countries could localize it by translating to their native language and making it even more easy to use, as well as the localization of MPack and IcePack malware kits to Chinese. In this campaign, a localized URL was also available targeting Dutch speaking visitors 58.65.238.36/polinanl, so you you have a German and Dutch languages included, and as we've seen the ongoing consolidation of malware authors and spammers serves well to both sides, spammers will on one hand segment all the German and Dutch emails, and the malware authors will mass mail using localized message templates. Great social engineering abusing a common stereotype that for instance German users were definitely flooded with English messages courtesy of Storm Worm targeting U.S citizens, which is like a Chinese user who's receiving a phishing email from the Royal Bank of Scotland - it's obvious both of these are easy to detect. Which is what localization is all about, the malware and spam speaks your local language. One downsize of this campaign is that Polina doesn't really look like a lonely German student, in fact she's a model and these are some of her portfolio shots.

Let's discuss how are the malware campaigners coming up with these Geocities accounts at the first place. Are the people behind the campaign manually registering them, outsourcing the registration process to someone else, or directly breaking the CAPTCHA? Could be even worse - they may be buying the already registered Geocities accounts from another group that's specializes in registering these, a group which like a previously covered concept of Proprietary Malware Tools is earning revenues based on higher profit margins given they don't distribute the product, but provide the service thereby keeping the automatic registration process know-how to themselves. Once the authentication details are known, the process of anything starting from blackhat SEO, direct spamming, malware hosting, and embedding such scripts, even IFRAMEs in a fully automated fashion.

Meanwhile, what are the chances there's another scammy ecosystem on the same netblock? But of course. vaichoau.com fake watches, pimpmovie.net malware C&C, urolicali.com.cn spammers, westernunion.reg-login.com a phishing url.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

First Person Shooter Anti-Malware Game

Just when you think you've seen everything "evil marketers" can come up to both, consciously and subconsciously influence your purchasing behaviour and improve the favorability scale towards a company - you can still get surprised. After a decent example of the DIY marketing concept, Microsoft's perception of security as a "threat from outer space", an example of rebranding a security vendor, the Invible Burglar game, here comes another good example of new media marketering practice - while some companies seek to embed their logos into popular games, others are coming up with ones on their own. Symantec's Endpoint Protection Game - a first person shooter where the typically mutated creatures are replaces with viruses, spyware and rootkits is what I'm blogging about :

"Your task is to simply save your global network from viruses, worms, and a hideous host of online threats that are poised to take your IT infrastructure down."

Eye catching trailer as well. Such marketing campaigns can have a huge educational potential if they're, for instance, customized for a specific security awareness program module.

Cyber Jihadist Blogs Switching Locations Again

Having had their blogs removed from Wordpress in a coordinated shutdown operation courtesy of the wisdom of the anti cyber jihadist crowd, The Ignored Puzzle Pieces of Knowledge and The Caravan of Martyrs have switched location to these URLs - inshallahshaheed.muslimpad.com; inshallahshaheed.acbox.com; caravanofmartyrs.muslimpad.com; ignoredknowledge.blogspot.com. Apparently there's an ongoing migration of cyber jihadist blogs from Wordpress to Muslimpads presumably with the idea to increase the time from a TOS abuse letter to shut down, if shut down ever occures given Muslimpad is significantly biased in removing such positioned as "free speech" communities given it's hosting provider is islamicnetwork.com. Should such propaganda be tolerated? This is where the different mandates of anti cyber jihadist organizations across the world contradict with each other. Some have a mandate to shut down such blogs and sites as soon as they come across such, others have a mandate to monitor and analyze these to keep in pace with emerging threats in the form of real-time intelligence, and in the near future other participants will have a mandate to infect such communities with malware ultimately targeting the cyber jihadists behind them or the visitors themselves.

The bottom line - the propaganda in the form of step-by-step video of an attack in question is a direct violation of their operational security (OPSEC) thereby providing the world's intelligence community with raw data on their warfare tactics. The propaganda's trade off is similar to that of the Dark Cyber Jihadist Web, while you may want to reach as many future recruits and "converts" as possible, you increase the chance of an intelligence analyst coming across your community, compared to closing it down to sorted and trustworthy individuals and therefore limiting the number of potential future jihadists. Inshallahshaheed are however, going for mass marketing with full speed, and in fact maintain a modest repository of videos at inshallahshaheed.vodpod.com. By the way, what's the difference between wishful thinking and thought crime? It's a threat that proves there's a positive ROI of your actions.

Related posts :
GIMF Switching Blogs
GIMF Now Permanently Shut Down
GIMF - "We Will Remain"

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Popular Spammers Strategies and Tactics

It's been a while since I last participated with an article for WindowSecurity.com, so here it goes - Popular Spammers Strategies and Tactics :

"During 2007, spammers on a worldwide basis demonstrated their adaptability to the ongoing efforts anti-spam vendors put into ensuring their customers enjoy the benefits of having a spam-free inbox. What strategies do spammers use in order to achieve this? What tactics do they use in order to obtain email addresses, verify their validity, ensure they reach the highest number of receipts as possible in the shortest time span achievable, while making sure their spam campaigns remain virtually impossible to shut down?"

The article covers strategies and tactics such as : Redirectors/doorway pages; Rapid tactical warfare; Verification/confirmation of delivery; Consolidation; Outsourcing; and Affiliation based models.

Electronic Jihad's Targets List

Despite the fact that the Electronic Jihad 3.0 campaign was a futile attempt right from the very beginning, given the domains that were supposed to synchronize the targets to be attacked were down, it's interesting to try finding out who were they targeting at the first place? In the first campaigns, the URLs of the targets, not the victims since they couldn't scale enough to cause even partial damage, were obtainable via the web, compared to the third one where they were about to get synchronized. And since the synchronization URLs were down before we could take a peek, here are the targets URLs from the first two campaigns.

First campaign's targets list :
gov.il
keshmesh.net
meca-love4all.com
love4all.us

Second campaign's targets list :
love4all.us
islameyat.com
aldalil-walborhan.com
rapsaweyat.com
investigateislam.com
meca-me.org
ladeeni.net
meca-love4all.com

The attached table is the classificaton of the attacks, as site to be attacked, reason for the attack, importance, the results, and the site's status after tha attack, namely is it up and running or shut down completely, and how shutting it down would please God.

There's a saying that a person is judged by the type of enemies he has. If we apply it in this situation, you would see a bunch of inspired wannabe cyber jihadists whose biggest enemy is their idiocity at the first place. So, if these are the cyber jihadist enemies of yours - lucky you, and your critical infrastructure's integrity.

Scammy Ecosystem

In this example of a scammy ecosystem, you have a single IP (88.255.90.50) hosting the now, retro WebAttacker exploitation kit (inn2coming.com/income/index.php), a viagra scam (pctabletshop.hk) on the second parked domain, and an investment banking scams on another two - progold-inv.biz; cfinancialservice.com. Now, all they're missing is a Rock Phish kit hosted on it and it would have made it an even more interesting operation to monitor. Of course putting more personal efforsts into everything pays off. The same netblock is also hosting such popular downloader's update locations and live exploit URLs such as stat1count.net; all1count.net; and the recently appeared on the radar mediacount.net (88.255.90.253).