Trojan lurks, waiting to steal admin passwords
Writers of a password-stealing Trojan horse program
have found that a little patience can lead to a lot of infections.
They have managed to infect hundreds of thousands of computers -- including more than 14,000 within one unnamed global hotel chain -- by waiting for system administrators to log onto infected PCs and then using a Microsoft administration tool to spread their malicious software throughout the network.
The criminals behind the Coreflood Trojan are using the software to steal banking and brokerage account usernames and passwords. They've amassed a 50G-byte database of this information from the machines they've infected, according to Joe Stewart, director of malware research with security vendor SecureWorks.
"They've been able to spread throughout entire enterprises," he said. "That's something you rarely see these days."
Since Microsoft shipped its Windows XP Service Pack 2 software with its locked-down security features, hackers have had a hard time finding ways to spread malicious
software throughout corporate networks. Widespread worm or virus outbreaks soon dropped off after the software's August 2004 release.
But the Coreflood hackers have been successful, thanks in part to a Microsoft program called PsExec, which was written to help system administrators run legitimate
software on computers across their networks.
For a widespread infection, attackers must first compromise a system on the network by tricking the user into downloading their program. Then, when a system
administrator logs onto that desktop machine -- to perform routine maintenance, for example -- the malicious software tries to run PsExec and install malware on all other systems on the network.
Often the technique succeeds.
Over the past 16 months, Coreflood's authors have infected more than 378,000 computers. SecureWorks has counted thousands of infections in university networks and has found financial companies, hospitals, law firms, and even a U.S. state police agency that have had hundreds of infections. "It's kind of insane how often they are getting on hundreds or thousands of computers at a single company," Stewart said. "They've probably stolen far more accounts than they can use."
The SANS Internet Storm Center reported one of the infections, which affected 600 machines on a 3,000 PC network, on June 25.
Malicious programs have used PsExec for more than five years, said the software's creator, Mark Russinovich, a Microsoft technical fellow. However, this is the first time he had heard of it being used in this fashion. "PsExec doesn't expose anything that a malware author can't code themselves or even accomplish with alternate mechanisms," he said in an e-mail interview. "Once you have credentials that give you local admin rights via remote access, you own that system."
Coreflood, which is also known as the AFcore Trojan, has been around for about six years. It has been used in the past for such things as launching denial-of-service attacks, but not to steal passwords, Stewart said.
SMS: The Coreflood Trojan program has used a Microsoft administration tool to infect corporate networks.
IDG News Service
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An interesting post but...
An interesting post but... it would be of greater value if it suggested ways to determine if a PC is infected with the malware, or at least linked to a source that could provide that guidance.Thank you,
Dan
I heartily agree with the
I heartily agree with the previous poster. At minimum, a brief mention should have been made of how the malicious software was detected; for example, would any "standard" anti-virus software find it. Probably not since the infection was so wide-spread. So just how was it detected?Symantec has issued five
Symantec has issued five updates with virus definitions to detect the coreflood trojan. Also CNET ran an article that further explains the coreflood trojan.The author did a good job in explaining how this trojan works and alerting more admins on the dangers. It is our jobs to do the research to find out how to keep our networks secure.