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The Sasser worm will leave in its wake an
estimated one million infected computers 80% of which
would belong to home users, possibly never to be disinfected
or patched, providing ideal havens for vandals through which
to perpetuate Internet fraud and crime, spam, and launch distributed
denial of service attacks.
And yet, the Sasser worm itself isn't the security issue.
Focusing only on the worm's technicalities would sidetrack
attention from its role in the ongoing epidemic of malware-induced
cyber crime.
The cyber crime epidemic
Worms today are the handiwork of those for whom cyber
crime, quite simply, affords lucrative returns. Money, not
notoriety, is now the inspiration.
Today there exists a flourishing market for infected machines.
Large blocks of infected machines, that can be controlled
remotely, are openly offered for sale. Sobig demonstrated
the close nexus between malware writers and spammers
machines infected by the Sobig mass mailing worm (which inserted
an open proxy in the machines) were offered to spammers at
a fee of US$5000 for every 10000 compromised machines.
The thriving market for compromised machines has swung the
underworld into hyperactivity. The past ten months have seen
several hacker groups and cyber crime syndicates setting up
attack networks (botnets) and releasing remote attack tools
through increasingly crafty malware like Blaster, Sinit, MyDoom,
Phatbot, Bagle, Netsky et al. In February of this year, business
rivalry unleashed the Internet's biggest cyber war between
the creators of MyDoom, Bagle and Netsky worms; forcing corporates
to scurry for cover as the world watched on helplessly.
Between 23rd January and 4th May, 24 variants of Bagle, 7
of MyDoom, and 30 of Netsky were released (61 worms in 100
days). The gangs hurled embedded abuses at each other through
their worm code, and launched direct attacks on their adversaries'
compromised machines deleting registry entries and backdoors,
and installing their own remote access tools instead.
Sasser and cyber crime
The Sasser worm should be viewed against this larger canvas.
It was released on 30th April. Three days later, the creators
of Netsky claimed credit for the Sasser worm with supporting
evidence that convinced security experts of its veracity (the
code and programming style in Sasser and Netsky is similar).
On 7th May, following his arrest, an 18-year-old German student
confessed to writing the Sasser worm. He is also suspected
of writing the Netsky.ac worm variant that appeared three
days after Sasser. Investigations are on to decipher the link
between the Russian SkyNet Antivirus Group (believed to be
responsible for the Netsky family of worms) and the German
teenager. The web of cyber crime chains linked across the
globe is emerging as much larger and more organized than ever
imagined.
On 8th May, the Sasser.E worm variant was released. It has
been programmed to remove registry entries used by the Bagle
worm variants, giving renewed impetus to the ongoing gang
war.
Sasser and Netsky merger
If more than 60 worms were released without much ado in 100
days, why should one Sasser worm kick up so much hype? Because,
unlike Sasser, all the others were mass mailing worms that
depended on user intervention to infect (this is a very big
handicap). Unless the user clicked open an attachment, the
email worm wouldn't propagate. But worm writers are wisening
up. The latest variant of Bagle does away with the attachment
prerequisite altogether and spreads when a vulnerable user
opens the e-mail using an unpatched version of Microsoft Outlook.
If their Outlook preview pane is open, the victim's machine
is compromised automatically. But even in this infection vector,
some user intervention is required.
Unlike the email worms, the Sasser requires no user intervention
at all. It, on its own, scans for machines having the Local
Security Authority Subsystem Service (LSASS) vulnerability;
and on detecting a vulnerable system, creates a remote connection
to the system, installs a file transfer protocol server and
then downloads itself to the new host.
However, the spread of the Sasser worm (and other vulnerability-exploit
worms like it) is related to the users' proclivity to patch
their vulnerable machines. The worm would start to slow down
as more and more users begin installing the latest antivirus,
firewalls and patches; and would eventually fade away (unless
a new variant comes along). In contrast, email worms tend
to continue their proliferation much longer, circumventing
antivirus and firewall defences that would have blocked a
vulnerability-exploit worm like Sasser.
Security experts are now predicting the mutation of Sasser
by combining it with the Netsky worm. The merger of Netsky
and Sasser variants will unleash attacks through both e-mail
and software vulnerabilities raising the launching pad of
cyber crime to the next higher level.
Holes, exploit codes and worms
Microsoft released a fix for the LSASS vulnerability on 13th
April in its MS04-011 patch. Within two days, a public exploit
to attack the vulnerability, written by Hi_Tech_Assassin,
was released on the French language web site k-otik.
Indeed, exploits for five of the 14 vulnerabilities fixed
in the MS04-011 patch release were out on the Internet within
six days. So one can be reasonably sure that worms that use
these exploit codes will be created shortly. However, as in
the case of Sasser, other attack tools favoured by hackers
will be upgraded with the new exploit codes, before creating
worms that use them.
Ironically, worms can go against the interests of cyber crime
syndicates because of the hype and attention they generate.
Usually, a worm is the last in the exploit evolution chain.
They tend to be released only after other attack tools have
compromised sufficient machines.
Sasser and Agobot
One of the most favoured attack tools of hackers and crime
syndicates operating networks of compromised Windows machines
for Spam delivery or distributed denial of service attacks
is the Agobot/Phatbot Trojan family. Known as bot software,
these remote attack tools can seek out and place themselves
on vulnerable computers, then run silently in the background,
allowing an attacker to send commands to the system while
its owner works away, unaware.
Hackers embedded the LSASS exploit code into the Agobot Trojan
a week before the release of Sasser. The upgraded Agobot Trojan
(Gaobot) is spreading fast. It exploits machines with the
LSASS hole (much the same way as Sasser does) but more stealthily.
While many network administrators worry about the Sasser worm,
security experts are warning that this quieter but equally
damaging threat is slowly gaining control of large networks
of computers. There is a high probability that machines infected
with Sasser are also infected with Gaobot.
The crime syndicates' improvements of the Sasser worm and
Agobot/Phatbot Trojan may make the Windows LSASS security
hole a more long-term security menace, with new Sasser variants
appearing while Agobot/Phatbot Trojans set up new 'botnets'
to launch Spam and denial of service attacks. The Sasser.F
variant is already out. Coincidently, the creator of Agobot
was arrested on the same day as the creator of Sasser, both
in Germany. Investigations are on to confirm if there are
any links connecting Sasser, Agobot, and Netsky.
The bottom-line
Users should patch their systems, turn on the firewall, and
install antivirus software to protect against Sasser and Gaobot
(which is the greater threat). Though Sasser is the more rapidly
spreading of the two, Gaobot can be much more dangerous, because
it gives criminals access to the infected computer.
Patch systems. Turn on firewalls. Install antivirus software.
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