Thursday, March 22, 2012

New variant of Duqu


As a facinated by the history of Duqu and Stuxnet I found this very intereting. See the text below by Kelly Jackson Higgins from Dark Reading.

The creators of Duqu may not have used traditional malware writers to craft their code, but they have done something that malware writers do: They released a new variant of their code with just enough tweaks to evade detection.

A day after researchers from Kaspersky Lab revealed that with the help of the security community, they had cracked the mystery of the programming language used in Duqu, researchers from Symantec yesterday announced they had discovered a new variant of Duqu -- the first one spotted since October. The first two were found in the wild in November 2010.

Vikram Thakur, principal manager at Symantec Security Response, says the creators of Duqu -- which Symantec and Kaspersky agree are the same ones who are behind Stuxnet -- basically changed a few bytes here and there to allow the malware to sneak past detection tools, including an open-source one built by the Laboratory of Cryptography and System Security (CrySyS Labs). "This is round two of the same thing: the old code, tweaked a bit," Thakur says.

The attackers changed the encryption algorithm and, rather than employing a stolen digital certificate as they had done before, used a phony Microsoft cert to make the driver appear to be legitimate. The sample discovered by Symantec came out of Iran, Thakur says, and it's just one piece of the malware package: specifically, the "loader," which installs the rest of the malware when the victim's machine restarts. The compile date on the malware is Feb. 23, 2012.

"We just found one component. We don't have the main file that landed on the computer or the config file where the command-and-control server is," he says.

Even so, it was enough evidence to show that the Duqu gang has not given up, despite all of the publicity and research focused on it. "These guys have a mission, whatever that might be, and don't care about what the security community or media might know about the threat," Thakur says. "They are extremely confident that it won't get back to them or be attributable to the person behind it. So they are continuing business as it is."

Roel Schouwenberg, senior antivirus researcher for Kaspersky Lab, says the latest move by the Duqu creators is that they are watching and will change their code as necessary. "It shows that their operations are still ongoing," Schouwenberg says. "It also means that up until that time, they didn't see a need to actually release new variants to evade detection."

And they obviously plan to use their existing framework despite the research community's scrutiny. They continue to leverage their investment in that code, security experts say.

Meanwhile, both Symantec and Kaspersky maintain that Duqu is more of an intelligence-gathering, cyberespionage malware, while Stuxnet was built to sabotage its target. Symantec's Thakur says the tricky part is that it's difficult to gain visibility into Duqu because it's so targeted. "We think Duqu does reconnaissance and [the attackers] take action based on the data they get back. Whether it's one mission ... is still up for debate," he says. "It's definitely by the same people."

Kaspersky's Schouwenberg says it's no surprise that Duqu showed up again in Iran. "Stuxnet's mission was sabotage. Duqu's mission was espionage and intelligence-gathering. Everything we have seen so far indicates that this operation is basically to gauge the status of the [Iranian] nuclear progress," he says.

And this won't be the last variant of Duqu. "I have no doubt we are going to see additional versions of Duqu. Maybe they are already out there," Thakur says. It's less likely there will be a new Stuxnet variant attacking the same Iranian nuclear facility, however, he says.

While enterprises, in general, don't have to worry much about Duqu, the sophisticated malware has added a new dimension to cyberespionage. "Duqu's espionage is clearly much better written than the average 'APT' espionage thing we see on a daily basis," Kaspersky's Schouwenberg says. "People should be paying attention to Duqu. There's a lot of interest in IP [intellectual property] out there."

To read the entire post from Dark Reading click here.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

51% of website traffic on the Internet is "non human"


A study released today shows that an alarming 51% of website traffic on the Internet are not actually humans but come from automated programs, most of which are malicious.

The study done by Incapsula, a provider of cloud security for websites, claims that most of this "non human" traffic is invisible because it does not show up on analytics software. The data was apparently collected from a sample of 1000 websites that are enrolled in to the Incapsula service. The breakdown of the 51% of "non-human" traffic is as follows:

- 5% is hacking tools searching for an unpatched or new vulnerability in a web site.

- 5% is scrapers.

- 2% is automated comment spammers.

- 19% is from “spies” collecting competitive intelligence.

The remaining 20% while automated, comes from benign search engines.

Source: HITB