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July 2, 2009 10:49 AM PDT

Waledac worm targeting July 4 spam offensive

by Elinor Mills
  • 10 comments

The Waledac worm is gearing up for a spam campaign related to the July 4 holiday, a security researcher warned on Thursday.

Researchers analyzing the code of the worm, which has been deploying updates to previously compromised PCs, have discovered that at least 18 domain names have been registered related to fireworks and Independence Day that will be used to trick people into visiting a malicious Web site, said Pierre-Marc Bureau, a senior researcher at antivirus vendor ESET.

Starting any time now and lasting through the weekend, the spam e-mails will arrive in in-boxes with a message urging the recipient to watch a July 4 video. The e-mails are expected to include a link to a site with an executable that, instead of playing a video when double-clicked, will download malware that turns the visiting PC into another bot on the botnet, Bureau said.

The operators of Waledac are using holidays and other current events to lure new victims in order expand their botnet, and it's likely they are leasing out the botnet services to others, he said. Earlier this year, Waledac exploited Valentine's Day, spamming people with fake romantic greetings.

It is estimated that there are tens of thousands of computers infected with Waledac and that more than 20,000 will be used in the July 4 spam campaign, according to Bureau.

More information is on the ESET blog.

April 9, 2009 11:43 AM PDT

Researchers say Conficker is all about the money

by Elinor Mills
  • 28 comments

The Conficker worm that has infected millions of Windows-based computers will likely be used to send spam and steal data much like one of the nastiest botnets on the Internet does, researchers said on Thursday after finding links between the two worms.

A week after failing to do anything but snore, the much hyped Conficker worm was roused from its slumber on Wednesday, with infected computers transmitting updates via peer-to-peer and dropping a mystery payload onto PCs. Researchers suspect that the payload program may be a keystroke logger, a spam generator, or both.

Conficker now also tries to connect to MySpace.com, MSN.com, eBay.com, CNN.com, and AOL.com as a way to test that the computer has Internet connectivity, deletes all traces of itself in the host machine, and is set to shut down some functionality on May 3.

In addition, Conficker reaches out to a domain that is known to be infected by a worm called Waledac and downloads an encrypted file. Researchers are analyzing that code and the program that is dropped directly onto infected machines by other infected machines to find out exactly what is in it. And they suspect that Conficker and Waledac are coming from the same people.

"I'm pretty certain the same people are behind both of them," said Paul Ferguson, an advanced threats researcher for Trend Micro. "Conficker has got their (Waledac creators') fingerprints all over it."

Computers infected with Waledac comprise what Ferguson called the "most pernicious spamming botnet on the Internet." Waledac spreads via a malicious Web link or an e-mail, typically a fake Christmas greeting or Valentine's Day message, or with a subject line related to the inauguration of President Obama. It generates spam and steals data, like passwords, from infected computers.

Ferguson said he believes Eastern Europeans are behind the Waledac worm. He suspects they created the Storm botnet to try different payloads and business models and that Waledac resulted from that. Ferguson speculates that they may be putting their lessons learned from earlier efforts into practice with Conficker.

"There is empirical evidence that these guys are a for-hire, for-profit criminal operation on the Internet and that Conficker is nothing more than part of that organization's best efforts to monetize their efforts on the Internet," Ferguson said.

Vincent Weafer, vice president of Symantec Security Response, confirmed the Waledac connection with Conficker, but wouldn't speculate on who exactly might be spreading the worms. The fact that Conficker now downloads a Waledac file "reconfirms our belief that ultimately this is a large botnet designed to make money," he said. "It's the first example of how these guys are trying to leverage this botnet for profit."

As for the May 3 expiration date in the latest Conficker code, Weafer said it appears to be trying to shut down code related to the first variant of Conficker, Conficker.A, which generated more noise on the Internet than later versions did.

Symantec researchers are calling the latest Conficker code that is circulating a new variant of the worm and have dubbed it Downadup.E, with Downadup being another name for Conficker.

The worm spreads via a hole in Windows that Microsoft patched in October, as well as through removable storage devices and network shares with weak passwords. The worm disables security software and blocks access to security Web sites.

To check if your computer is infected you can use this Conficker Eye Chart or this site at the University of Bonn. There is also a Conficker removal guide on CNET's Download.com site.

People are being urged to be careful in their quest for Conficker removal tools. Marshale8e6 has found spam that takes advantage of the hype over the Conficker worm to scare people into installing fake antivirus software. The e-mail messages claim to be from Microsoft security departments and provide a link to a Web page that does a fake computer scan and prompts the visitor to buy antivirus software that typically does nothing but install malware on the computer.

Also, using search engines to try to find Conficker removal tools is maybe not the best idea. Trend Micro has found that Google searches using terms related to Conficker bring up results that include links to malware. They recommend going directly to the site of a trusted security vendor to get software instead of doing general searches.

Meanwhile, Conficker also has inspired a copycat worm. Neeris, an IRC bot that spreads itself by sending links through MSN Messenger, has been active for a few years, but a new variant has emerged that borrows some behavior from Conficker, such as exploiting the same hole in Windows that Conficker does and spreading via removable storage devices, Microsoft said.

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