The metamorphosis of malware writers, Hacking and IT E-Book Dump Release

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computers & security 25 (2006) 89–90
available at www.sciencedirect.com
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The metamorphosis of malware writers
Danny Bradbury
article info
abstract
Article history:
Received 20 January 2006
Revised 23 January 2006
Accepted 23 January 2006
The reasons for writing malware are changing – and so is the malware itself. Danny
Bradbury reports on the development of a seedy commercial market.
ª 2006 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Bill Gates’ time is up. At the end of January 2004, at the
Davos forum, he said that within two years, spam would be
a thing of the past. In reality, the problem is as rampant as
ever. On its own, that would be merely irritating, but for the
past three years or so, developments in the relationships be-
tween spammers and malware writers have followed a worry-
ing trend. Security experts agree that the two are colluding for
profit, meaning that the motives and modus operandi of
malware writers have been changing.
‘‘When I started in 1988, people were writing viruses and
malware mostly to become famous,’’ recalls Righard J. Zwie-
nenberg, Chief Research Officer at security software vendor
Norman Data Systems. ‘‘Nowadays it’s moved from that field
into the more organised crime field.’’
Botnets are largely responsible for bringing spammers and
malware authors together. Known to most people working in
security today, botnets are networks of compromised ‘zombie’
PCs which can be exploited by hackers for nefarious purposes.
Networks of compromised servers were used from 2000 on-
wards for distributed denial of service attacks, but in the early
days the motives were either just for the thrill of it, or to attack
a political target such as an SCO, which was hit by a DDoS attack
after taking a contentious legal position against Linux users.
Security experts such as Miko Hypponnen, head of anti-
virus research at security firm F-Secure have said that 2003
was the year when things changed in a big way. The use of bot-
nets became more organised as spammers realised that instead
of relaying email through unprotected corporate SMTP servers
which would soon be blacklisted, they could use thousands of
PCs to send unsolicited commercial email. The malware
writers who compromised the computers with Internet worms
realised that they could be rented out to spammers for a fee. As
botnets created from compromised desktop PCs grew, they cre-
ated a black market in zombie machines manipulated via IRC to
send spam. ‘‘We’re seeing more evidence than ever before of
that
organized
element
coming
into
virus
writing,’’
says
Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos.
If sending spam from an unwitting users’ PC was not bad
enough, other for-profit uses of botnets are even more sinis-
ter. ‘‘The Russian mafia is pretty well known nowadays, oper-
ating botnets to get details from credit cards,’’ says
Zwienenberg. A compromised desktop PC can be programmed
to log keystrokes and look for credit card numbers, for exam-
ple, or monitor access to banking websites to harvest pass-
words. The Bancos Trojan, released early last year, is a good
example of such an attack.
For this reason, the nature of malware is changing. Internet
worms designed to spread quickly were commonplace a cou-
ple of years ago, but 2005 saw fewer of these, says David Emm,
senior technology consultant at anti-virus vendor Kaspersky
Labs. ‘‘What we saw instead is where people want to send
out malicious code, they’re spamming it deliberately,’’ he
says. ‘‘They do an initial spam distribution and that’s it. So
the thing doesn’t has legs of its own, it relies on the first blast.’’
The reason is twofold, explains Sophos’ Cluley. Firstly,
sending out a rapidly proliferating worm to create a huge
botnet is too obvious and raises too many alarms, prompt-
ing users to take security measures. Yesterday’s hobbyist
malware writer was generally an adolescent male wanting
to be noticed by his peers. Today’s for-profit malware
writers want to stay under the radar, because if their prod-
uct is noticed it prompts victims to take action and reduces
E-mail address:
danny@itjournalist.com
0167-4048/$ – see front matter ª 2006 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
doi:10.1016/j.cose.2006.01.003
 90
computers & security 25 (2006) 89–90
the number of compromised machines. This is why modern
malware is less likely to deliver a payload obvious to the
victim, such as deleting files from the hard drive. Organized
commercial malware authors want to enslave, not destroy,
their targets.
Secondly, while it may be advantageous to co-opt as many
PCs as possible to a botnet used for a DDoS attack, large num-
bers of zombie machines can be counterintuitive when using
them for other purposes.
‘‘If the botnet does steal credit card information, [a very
large botnet would provide] too much data for the criminals
to handle,’’ points out Cluley. ‘‘They don’t want a million
credit card numbers because that is too many to process.’’ Bet-
ter to steal credit card numbers from 100 zombie machines,
process them, and then create another 100 zombie PCs at
your leisure.
No wonder, then, that Sophos has seen a surge in the num-
ber of non-replicating Trojan horse programs being spammed
out by email. Sixty-two percent of all malware programs that
the company saw in 2005 were Trojan horses.
This does not mean that DDoS attacks are a thing of the
past, however. They have also evolved into a commercial
venture for criminals. Companies such as online gambling
sites and banks are receiving blackmail threats from crimi-
nal groups who threaten to bring down their websites for
periods of time using botnet-originated DDoS techniques.
Apart from the loss of face and customer confidence, this
can also have a serious impact on revenue if, for example,
an online betting site is taken down just before a high-
profile sporting event.
Another trick that F-Secure’s Hypponnen identified over
a year ago was the use of botnet machines to host files. In
one case, he found that crooks using some of the rarer top-
level identifiers such as .biz and .info were able to reduce
DNS caching times to minutes, meaning that the destination
machine behind an URL could be changed very quickly. Sev-
eral machines on a botnet could then be loaded with content
and used as temporary servers, making it difficult to shut
down an illicit website.
Such illegal websites can be used for activities such as sell-
ing counterfeit software. Peter Anaman, a senior Internet in-
vestigations manager who traces counterfeit software
vendors for the Business Software Association began noticing
botnets being used to host illicit websites last July. However, in
the version he saw, the content did not reside on the compro-
mised desktop PC. Instead, it resided on a server, which could
be replicated in different regions to throw investigators off the
trail.
‘‘Virus writers would offer infected computers on these
botnets, and once they were infected they acted as web prox-
ies,’’ he says. ‘‘Every time you did a reverse lookup to find out
where something was hosted, you’d find a DSL account.’’
The people behind such cybercrimes come from multiple
countries. In some cases, Anaman is convinced that organized
crime groups associated with other physical crimes are also
engaging in online crime.
‘‘Brazil is particularly the staging post for some of this
stuff,’’ says Kaspersky’s Emm. ‘‘We have also seen activity
coming out of the far east and Russia.’’ Some of the Russian
malware encrypts data on the target machine and then asks
the user for money in return for a decryption tool to return
the user’s data.
While such malware hides files and holds them to ransom,
another kind does exactly the opposite, recovering sensitive
files from PCs and delivering them to the attacker. The
National High-Tech Crime Unit in the UK arrested London-
based Michael Haephrati in 2005 as part of a law-enforcement
exercise called Operation Racehorse. Haephrati was accused
of supplying a Trojan horse program to hackers which would
harvest confidential documents from a PC. Executives in sev-
eral Israeli companies were placed under investigation for cor-
porate espionage.
Wherever they are from, it is likely that cybercriminals are
using a different generation of malware writer to the typical
maladjusted teen who has traditionally been the author of vi-
ruses in the past. Sophos has not seen any evidence of known
virus writing groups such as 29A working with criminals –
indeed, 29A is now largely dormant. Young people with com-
puter skills who are not ethically mature may realise that
they can make money from their activities, says Cluley.
‘‘Whether the serious organized criminals would want a teen-
ager on their books or not is another question. They might
make mistakes or brag about it. So I think the demographic is
getting older.’’
Detecting and catching cybercrooks can be difficult. ‘‘They
use thousands of domain names registered worldwide
through different registrars,’’ says Anaman of the criminals
using botnets as proxies to illegal websites. ‘‘These are kept
in hibernation until used. Those in hibernation, which is
a good 75% of them, are harder to find.’’
Anaman will adapt standard network tools in innovative
ways to help gather evidence. For example, he may conduct
a batch WHOIS lookup to find all of the domain names regis-
tered by the same person and try to cluster registration infor-
mation and identify trends.
But even after these efforts it can be difficult to pin down
the perpetrators. ‘‘We have had a lot of problems because
once you have crimes committed across borders, although
there is great co-operation between countries it isn’t as re-
fined as it should be,’’ Anaman says. ‘‘So a lot of cases have
to be dropped because there isn’t enough evidence in a partic-
ular country to support it.’’
In England, the National High-Tech Crime Unit worked ex-
tensively with authorities in other countries to try and tackle
the problem, but it is an uphill battle. The Internet’s strength
is a weakness for law-enforcement agencies. Electronic Fron-
tier Foundation co-founder John Gilmore said in 1993 that the
Internet treats censorship as damage and routes around it.
That may be true, but what applies to censorship may also ap-
ply to law enforcement. And as malware writers become more
commercially minded, that could make the Internet the bat-
tleground of the 21st century.
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