Opportunism, spam behind new worms

A widespread and dangerous Microsoft Corp. Windows vulnerability, spam e-mail messages and human frailty combined in recent weeks to produce a flood of new Internet worm attacks, according to experts at leading antivirus and e-mail security companies.

August saw four major worm infections alone, according to antivirus company Symantec Corp., making it one of the busiest months for antivirus vendors in recent memory.

“Taken all together, this has been a more intense week, in terms of virus activity, than any we’ve seen,” said Chris Belthoff, senior security analyst at antivirus company Sophos PLC.

That activity included the appearance of W32.Blaster on August 11, a virulent new Internet worm that exploited a flaw in the Windows implementation of the RPC (Remote Procedure Call) protocol, which enables client and server applications to communicate across networks.

The worm spread worldwide in a matter of hours, infecting hundreds of thousands of Windows machines before the outbreak began to wane, according to Internet Security Systems Inc. (ISS).

A survey of 1,100 organizations by TruSecure Corp. found that almost 21 per cent were infected by the worm, with 15 per cent of corporations worldwide recording a “moderate” or “major” impact on operations by Blaster.

The impact among home users, who are generally less well-protected than organizations, is believed to be even greater, according to Marc Maiffret, chief hacking officer at eEye Digital Security Inc.

As Blaster waned, new worms emerged that exploited the same vulnerability including W32.Welchia, also known as Nachi, which attempted to patch Windows systems with the RPC vulnerability.

At the same time, a new version of the Sobig worm, Sobig.F, began bombarding e-mail accounts around the world, prompting new infections, warnings from antivirus companies and hurried updates of antivirus software.

E-mail filtering company MessageLabs Ltd. of New York City intercepted ten times the normal number of e-mail viruses in the 24 hours after Sobig.F appeared and has intercepted over three million copies of the virus so far, according to CTO Mark Sunner.

But the recent spate of large outbreaks don’t herald the arrival of a new and more dangerous generation of viruses, as did the appearance of the Code Red and NIMDA worms in 2001, or the SQL Slammer worm in January, according to Belthoff.

“I think it’s an intersection of a couple things,” Belthoff said. “Blaster and (Welchia/Nachi)…those are all opportunistic worms. They’re all based on this Windows (RPC) vulnerability. Blaster didn’t take any in-depth skill to write.”

In the case of the new Sobig worm, improvements in that worm’s ability to send out copies of itself in e-mail messages meant that even a small number of infected machines could generate massive amounts of infected e-mail traffic, according to Sunner.

MessageLabs researchers believe that there is a link between the Sobig author and the spamming community and that machines that are compromised by Sobig are being used as distribution stations for spam e-mail, Sunner said.

Sixty six per cent of the e-mail messages MessageLabs intercepts come from such machines, commonly referred to as “open proxies.” And the increase in spam traffic corresponds closely to the appearance of worms like Sobig, Sunner said.

The intense media attention given to the worm outbreaks may have also stimulated virus and worm writers, according to Neel Mehta, a research engineer at ISS X-Force.

“Virus writers get recognized and that encourages them and others to repeat their actions,” he said.

While experts tend to agree on the myriad of causes for the new worms, there is less agreement about what to do to stop them in the future.

Most agree that software companies such as Microsoft need to do a better job of weeding out glaring security holes like the RPC vulnerability while companies should be better about promptly applying software patches as they become available.

“You need balance with the (software) vendors. They need to build more stable code, but IT departments need to take patching more seriously and make it part of their overall security plan,” Belthoff said.

Corporate IT security personnel should also do a better job educating employees about proper etiquette for opening or forwarding suspicious e-mail messages.

“If your end-user population is educated in the work environment, (e-mail worms) shouldn’t be a problem at all,” Belthoff said.

But others disagree, saying that part of the blame lies with antivirus technology companies, which still require their customers to apply software patches and updates to be protected against new threats.

“Traditional antivirus protection is very reactive in nature. Antivirus vendors don’t know about a new virus until their switchboards start to light up with calls from their customers, then it’s a race against time,” Sunner said.

Virus writers like the author of Sobig are increasingly savvy and look to exploit that, he said.

“They’re trying to get a virus out there for a short period of time and exploit that window of time using a mass propagation tool like e-mail,” Sunner said.

More security vulnerabilities like the RPC vulnerability are inevitable, as are new worms to exploit them, according to experts.

Even more troubling, the window of time between when vulnerabilities are disclosed and when worms and viruses that exploit them appear is likely to close even more.

It took six months for the SQL Server vulnerability to be turned into the SQL Slammer worm. The Windows RPC vulnerability was exploited in just three weeks.

“There is more awareness of vulnerabilities and more motivation to go ahead and write malicious code, because of the attention previous worms have gotten,” Mehta said.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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