Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services. Simplify, Integrate and Secure: Providing Secure Access to Server-based Information and Resources Across Platforms
Web Security SaaS: The Next Generation of Web Security
Still Sneaking In: The Threats Your Security Tools Aren't Telling You About
Radicati Market Quadrant 2008 on Corporate Web Security
Dude! You Say I Need an Application-Layer Firewall?!
Australian Unity minimizes costs and maximizes productivity with single sign-on for 1,400 users
Why Security SaaS Makes Sense Today
Simplify, Integrate and Safeguard Your Business with Secure Web Business Enablement
Zones provide focussed content from Computerworld and leading technology partners.Newsletter Subscription
Rootkits are software code designed to hide from detection. So Kaspersky Lab's hunt for the elusive Rustock.C rootkit, rumored to exist for almost two years, reads like a detective plot.
Alexander Gostev, Kaspersky Lab's senior virus analyst, tells the tale in his blog Tuesday on Viruslist. According to Gostev, the Russian security firm Dr. Web in early May announced its experts had obtained a sample of Rustock.C in March but the sample it shared with the rest of the antivirus community lacked a 'dropper', the file designed to install the rootkit on the system.
"The sample of the rootkit's body distributed by Dr. Web was a 244,448-byte Windows driver," Gostev writes in his blog "Rustock and All That".
If the dropper had been provided, "this file could have significantly simplified the work carried out by other antivirus laboratories to analyze the rootkit and develop procedures to detect and treat Rustock.C. It might also have helped to clarify how the rootkit had originally spread."
The rootkit, the third variant in the Rustock series, hadn't been known to exist "in the wild," according to Kaspersky, so antivirus experts pondered the possibility that Rustock.C was nothing more than a "collector's item" and not widespread, which would have explained the time taken to find it.
Kaspersky Lab started in-depth analysis of the rootkit's encrypted code on May 12. After cracking the key, Kaspersky could view portions of the real code of Rostock.C on May 14.
By May 20, Kaspersky Lab had come up with its own methods for detection and treatment of the third Rustock. As part of the analysis, Kaspersky discovered it had 600 files that had been caught in its honeypots at different times after September 2007, and now believes that the rumors of Rustock.C as far back as 2006 "was created after a promotion of sorts in rootkit researcher circles -- possibly in response to the hysteria that accompanied the search for it," Gostev writes.
Kaspersky has identified four modifications of Rustock.C. The rootkit code works as a spambot, extracting the DLL from its body and executing it in the system memory of the target computer (it exists only in RAM and is never present on the hard drive in the form of a file), according to Kaspersky's analysis.
"Its purpose is to send spam from an infected computer," Gostev writes. The IP address identified belongs to hosting provider MCCOLO, "whose resources have long been used for distributing malicious programs and hosting cybercriminal sites," he adds.
About the Rustock.C rootkit, "it appears whoever created the rootkit was so confident of its effectiveness that they did not attach much importance to thwarting antivirus protection," Gostev says in his blog.
Further sleuthing led Kaspersky experts to believe that cybercrimnal groups associated with malware and botnets CoolWebSearch, IFrameBiz, Trafficadvance and LoadAdv are also associated with the creation of Rustock.C. "The group can be traced back to Russia, where most of its members undoubtedly live," Gostev writes.
Kaspersky also traced Rustock.C's dropper, which was Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Agent.DLL.
"The reconstruction of events by our experts demonstrates that the rootkit was actively spreading from September to November 2007," Gostev writes. "The use of the IFrameBiz network could ensure that it became truly widespread."
He adds: "The objective of Rustock's author was not to create an undetectable rootkit but to make analyzing the rootkit as difficult as possible once it had been detected. This would ensure that there was a certain time lag between the beginning of the rootkit's distribution and its detection by antivirus solutions."
Kaspersky Lab released procedures for the detection and treatment of infected files on May 20.
The next question, Gostev says, is whether there will be a Rustock.D. Kaspersky says it doesn't have the answer to that question, but don't be surprised if more sleuthing may be needed in the future.
Computerworld Member Login
Security Management
Protect your critical IT assets, achieve sustainable regulatory compliance, reduce IT administration costs and enable new business opportunities with our IT security solutions.
IT Security as a business enabler?
Download Whitepaper
|
Success Stories
Australian Unity minimises costs and maximises productivity with single sign-on for 1,400 users
Australian Unity needed to address its business and security risks including user management and application security management. The company chose an enterprise single sign-on (ESSO) solution and discovered increased employee productivity, reduced help desk costs and elevated data protection.
Download the full Success Story
BT saves more than £15 million and improves customer services with comprehensive Identity & Access Management
To enable future growth and ensure its services remain competitive, BT needed to build closer relationships with its customers and suppliers. Discover how the company is now performing over 36 million transactions a day with their improved Identity & Access Management Solution.
Download the full Success Story
Identity & Access Management
Simplify and Secure: Managing User Identities Throughout their Lifecycles
Organisations are constantly challenged to keep pace with ongoing changes to users and their roles, responsibilities and requirements. Discover how CA can help you create a unified approach for managing users identities, providing them with timely and appropriate access to applications and information.
Download Whitepaper
Simplify, Integrate and Safeguard Your Business with Secure Web Business Enablement
Modern organisations are required to aggressively expand the number and type of Web applications and services provided to customers, partners and employees. Discover how to automate, delegate and centralise your key processes and services including user administration, access policies, auditing and compliance by reading on.
Download Whitepaper
Simplify, Integrate and Secure: Providing Secure Access to Server-based Information and Resources Across Platforms
Distributed servers are a powerful asset in any company’s infrastructure. Over time, most organisations have acquired a variety of different platforms and are relying on them to house an increased amount of critical applications, processes and data. Read on to discover how you can achieve a consistently higher level of server access security across multiple platforms including virtual hosts and guest operating systems.
Download Whitepaper










