Showing posts with label Botnet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Botnet. Show all posts

Friday, March 12, 2010

Zeus Online Banking Trojan Keeps Getting Better...for Criminals

It said "don't" click and yet you did.  Just goes to show you how easy it is to lure anyone with a mouse to a website that infects their PC with malware?  I'm kidding...no malware here...just making a point... JBF







ZeuS botnet code keeps getting better… for criminals


$10,000 will buy a ZeuS module that takes complete control of a compromised PC 



By Ellen Messmer, Network World   March 11, 2010 04:19 PM ET


New capabilities are strengthening the ZeuS botnet, which criminals use to steal financial credentials and execute unauthorized transactions in online banking, automated clearing house (ACH) networks and payroll systems.



The latest version of this cybercrime toolkit, which starts at about $3,000, offers a $10,000 module that can let attackers completely take control of a compromised PC.
The latest version of ZeuS gets around most of the advanced online authentication mechanisms used by banks today, with perhaps the exception of a transaction approval process based on at least two people...The latest version is also designed to blow through the most current defenses in place regarding two-factor and other authentication in banking systems, and is especially oriented toward facilitating high-dollar transactions of $100,000 or more."




Continue Reading at Network World

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Thursday, March 11, 2010

Zeus Botnet Amputated - Limb Regrows Quickly

Image representing Associated Press as depicte...
Huge 'botnet' amputated, but criminals reconnect



By JORDAN ROBERTSON (AP) – 12 hours ago



SAN JOSE, Calif. — The sudden takedown of an Internet provider thought to be helping spread one of the most promiscuous pieces of malicious software out there appears to have cut off criminals from potentially millions of personal computers under their control.



 victory was short-lived. Less than a day after a service known as "AS Troyak" was unplugged from the Internet, security researchers said Wednesday it apparently had found a way to get back online, and criminals were reconnecting with their unmoored machines.



The drama initially raised hopes of a sharp drop-off in fraud, because criminals could no longer communicate with many computers infected with a type of malware known as "ZeuS," which is mostly used to steal online banking usernames and passwords. Hundreds of criminal operations around the world use the malware.




It's unknown how many computers are infected with ZeuS, but it's estimated to be in the millions. Cisco Systems Inc. said as many as 25 percent of the world's ZeuS-infected machines were unplugged from the massive "botnet" overnight with the takedown of AS Troyak. 



Botnets are networks of infected PCs that behave like criminals' remote-control robots. They steal identities en masse and are used to attack Web sites.



But instead of a slam-dunk victory, the incident wound up highlighting the whiplash pace at which criminals can resurrect their illicit businesses after what should have been a devastating setback.




RSA, the security division of EMC Corp., said dozens of malicious servers that criminals used to spread ZeuS were connected to the Internet by AS Troyak. The service inexplicably went dark Tuesday, severing the ties between criminals and ZeuS-infected machines under their control. 



It's not publicly known who pulled the plug. It could have been law enforcement, security researchers, or even the criminals themselves if they decided to move their operations to other servers.  Shutting down malware operations is a constant cat-and-mouse game.



Some services exist solely to host malicious content, and when their connections to the Internet are severed, it's often relatively easy to find another provider willing to sell them a new connection.



RSA researchers wrote in a note to clients that their experience shows that "these kinds of drastic changes are usually short-lived, as in the long run, criminals tend to restructure their criminal activity and relaunch their online attacks."



That apparently happened — and quickly. By Wednesday, researchers said the servers appeared to be back online, through a new Internet provider.



Cisco researchers said a total of 68 command-and-control servers were brought down, but that it's unknown how many infected computers were connected to each of those.



But they added that the criminals may have known the servers were going to be brought down, because traffic to those servers spiked over the weekend, suggesting they were directing infected computers to point to new servers.



One of the most high-profile takedowns of a malicious Web site hosting service involved a company called McColo Corp. whose Internet service was severed in the winter of 2008 after researchers amassed evidence of the company's wrongdoing.



Worldwide spam volumes almost instantly dropped by half, but within days started climbing again.



Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

New Online Banking Trojan "BlackEnergy" Packs a Double Wallop

On Wednesday, SecureWorks Joe Stewart talked at the RSA Conference about the BlackEnergy Banking Trojan and how it hit's banks with a double-whammy.  It steals online banking credentials (Don't Type/Swipe) and then wages a DDoS attack on the banks as a cover.  Forbes did a story on this yesterday in which they stated:



On Wednesday cybersecurity researchers at Secureworks issued a report describing a new cybercriminal group that aims a one-two punch at banks. First it collects banking customers' passwords using a variation of the so-called Black Energy software, which has infected thousands of computers worldwide to create a "botnet" of hijacked machines. The machines use the collected passwords to move funds into the hackers' accounts, and then typically delete files from the user's computer to cover their tracks.

Today, DarkReading's Kelly Jackson Higgins writes about BlackEnergy.  Again.  If we stop typing our online banking credentials into boxes in browsers and instead, swipe our bank issued card and enter our bank issued PIN, then the bad guys would get a bunch of 3DES DUKPT encrypted gobblygook.



New BlackEnergy Trojan Targeting Russian, Ukrainian Banks

Botnet lets attackers steal online banking credentials and DDoS Russian and Ukrainian banks


Mar 04, 2010 | 09:24 AM
By Kelly Jackson Higgins | DarkReading

SAN FRANCISCO -- RSA Conference 2010 -- Russian hackers have written a more sophisticated version of the infamous BlackEnergy Trojan associated with the 2008 cyberattacks against Georgia that now targets Russian and Ukrainian online banking customers.



Joe Stewart, a security researcher with SecureWorks, says Russian hackers are using the Trojan spread via the BlackEnergy botnet to hit Russian and Ukrainian banks with a two-pronged attack that steals their customers' online banking credentials and then wage a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack on the banks as a cover: "They may be emptying the bank accounts while the banks are busy cleaning up from the DDoS," Stewart says.



Dubbed by Stewart as "BlackEnergy 2," this new version of the Trojan is a full rewrite of the code that features a modular architecture that supports plug-ins that can be written without access to its source code. It currently comes with three different DDoS plug-ins, as well as one for spamming and two for online banking fraud, according to Stewart.

While the Zeus Trojan remains the most popular Trojan, Stewart says BlackEnergy 2 can do things Zeus cannot, such as stealing online credentials plus DDoS'ing. BlackEnergy 2 also steals the user's private encryption key. Stewart has written an analysis of the Trojan, available here.


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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Bugat Trojan Aims Sights at Business Customers

New Banking Trojan Discovered Targeting Businesses' Financial Accounts

Bugat Trojan spread via the Zbot/Zeus botnet, say SecureWorks researchers



Feb 09, 2010 | 04:27 PM By Kelly Jackson Higgins

DarkReading



The infamous Zbot botnet that spreads the pervasive Zeus Trojan has been seen distributing a brand-new banking Trojan -- one that researchers say could serve as a lower-cost alternative to the popular Zeus and Clampi malware for cybercriminals.



The new Bugat Trojan, which was discovered by researchers at SecureWorks, appears to be aimed at mostly business customers of large and midsize banks. It's built for attacks that hack automated clearinghouse (ACH) and wire transfer transactions for check and payment processing -- attacks in which U.S.-based SMBs and state and local governments are losing an average of $100,000 to $200,000 per day, according to data from Neustar.



To date, Zeus and Clampi Trojans have mostly been used for stealing financial credentials. But Jason Milletary, security researcher with SecureWorks' Counter Threat Unit (CTU), says Bugat has some of the same features as other banking Trojans, but with a few twists: It uses an SSL-encrypted command and control (C&C) infrastructure via HTTP-S, and also goes after FTP and POP credentials via those encrypted sessions. Milletary says SecureWorks has witnessed around 1,200 to 3,000 Bogat attack attempts during the past week against its clients. "We saw in the wild that it was being distributed from a specific Zeus botnet," he says. "Oddly enough, its purpose is the same as Zeus ... but it's something not as recognizable as Zeus or that's cheaper [to purchase] in the long term."



Bugat's main targets so far are business financial accounts...



Continue "Dark Reading"



 





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