Intro zu den heutigen oberen Botnet Angriffen
durch Corey Nachreiner, CISSP, Netz-Sicherheit Analytiker, WatchGuard Technologien
[Anmerkung des Herausgebers: Dieser Artikel ergänzt die Liste der Angriffe, die in Teil 2 der videoreihe gezeigt werden, Malware Analyse: Botnets. „Malware Analyse: Botnets, zerteilen 2 ″ Erscheinen, die eine kleine Teilmenge botnet in der Tätigkeit in Angriff nimmt. Dieser Artikel füllt heraus, daß Teilmenge mit mehr allgemein gefunden in einem Arsenal der BOT herders angreift. LiveSecurity Teilnehmer können die videos kostenlos auf unserem finden VideoTutorials Seite. –Scott]
Sie hören häufig die botnets, die beschrieben werden als schweizer Armeemesser eines „Hackers.“ Gerade während ein schweizer Armeemesser mit einer verrückten Vielzahl der Blätter, der Schere und der Schraubenzieher kommen kann, kommen bots mit zahlreichen Großtaten und Befehlen, die BOT herders viele unterschiedliche Arten Angriffe ausstoßen lassen.
Seit der Kodierung herauf ein BOT Klient Nehmen Zeit und Fähigkeit, kaufen die meisten Angreifer BOT Code im on-line-Untergrund. Populäre böswillige bots schließen Phatbot, Agobot und das, das in unserem Bildschirm, Rxbot gezeigt wird mit ein. Diese BOT Klienten verwenden modularen Code, also, wenn ein BOT herder nicht die Reihe von Befehlen seine BOT Angebote liebt, addiert er einfach Neue. Für Beispiele lesen Sie an.
Was paßt besser als Zombies und Spam zusammen?
BOT herders setzen allgemein ihre bots als sehr große Spam Relais wirksam ein. Wie sehr groß? Entsprechend einer neuen Studie durch Commtouch, war 87% alles email, das über das Internet während 2006 gesendet wurde, Spam. Dieser Etrödel erzeugte Terabyte bis 1700 (1.700.000.000 Megabytes) des Internet-Verkehrs täglich. Botnets erzeugte 85% dieses Spam, eine Gezeiten- Welle der unerwünschten Post.
Der meiste BOT Code kommt mit mindestens einigen Befehlen, Spamming einfacher zu bilden. Etwas bots werden sogar spezifisch für Spamming optimiert. Ein BOT herder, das Phatbot verwendet, kann den Befehl herausgeben harvest.emails jedes email address auf dem Computer eines Opfers sammeln. Wenn ein botnet der Phatbot herders Tausenden aus Opfermaschinen besteht, er könnte Gi--normousemail Listen zu neuerem Spam schnell und leicht erstellen.
Agobot wird für Spamming besonders angefertigt. Es schließt sogar seine eigene smtp Maschine mit ein, damit es Spam direkt kann. Seine email Spamming Befehle lassen ein Agobot herder jeden von Computern seines Opfers erklären:
- Downloaden Sie eine Liste der email Adressen zu Spam
- Downloaden Sie eine Schablone email Anzeige, um auszusenden
- Anfang, Anzeigen das Verwenden aussendend viel unterschiedliches email, verlegt gleichzeitig
- Beginnen Sie und stoppen Sie Spamming, wenn Sie zu angewiesen werden.
Das BOT in unserem Bildschirm, Rxbot, gilt nicht als ein Spamming BOT. Jedoch sogar enthält es einen grundlegenden Befehl, der ein BOT herder ein email von allen seinen Zombieopfern senden läßt.
I’m hiding behind my SOCKS
Many bots include a SOCKS server. SOCKS (an abbreviation for sockets) is a networking protocol designed to pass TCP traffic through a proxy server. In other words, if a client wanted to visit www.google.com using SOCKS, the client would send its request to a SOCKS server instead of to Google directly. The SOCKS server forwards that request to Google and returns the response to the client. However, to Google it looks as though the request came from the SOCKS server, not the actual client.
Bot herders love to use the SOCKS proxy to spam. A bot master simply enables the SOCKS proxy on one of his bots, then redirects his SOCKS-compatible, mass emailing program to the IP address of that bot. This causes the email program to send email using that bot as a relay. If an anti-spam program blacklists the bot’s IP address, the herder activates the SOCKS proxy on another bot, and his spam seems to originate from a new, clean IP address.
Furthermore, the bot herder can use a SOCKS proxy to anonymize just about any network traffic. And in Rxbot, for instance, activating the SOCKS proxy is simple: one six-letter command initiates all those anonymizing benefits.
Some bots have a Man-in-the-Middle
Bots also help herders launch Man-in-the-Middle (MitM) attacks. Most bots come with commands that allow their creators to redirect network traffic any way they like. For instance, a bot herder could tell a bot to redirect all its web traffic to his computer. Then, every time the unwitting victim (whose machine is hosting that bot) browses the Web, the attacker sees the traffic before forwarding it to its intended destination. This is one way bot masters capture sensitive information or steal login credentials.
Rxbot comes with the .redirect command. Herders can use this command to forward the network traffic destined for any TCP port, to any IP address they choose. Phatbot comes with additional redirect commands that allow it to forward GRE traffic, the special protocol used in establishing PPTP VPN connections. These examples merely hint at what a bot herder can accomplish with redirects.
Click Fraud and Poll Manipulation
Nowadays, the lure of illegal easy money motivates most bot herders. Our video shows how crooks can force their bots to click on revenue-generating Google ad words. As another example, Rxbot has a simple-yet-effective .visit command. If you send your bots this command, followed by a URL, they silently visit that URL. Here, silently is a technical term meaning the bot victim will not see her computer visit the URL. The visit happens in the background, without any web browser involvement. So, imagine you have 100,000 bots. With one command you could easily force all those bots to visit an online poll, vote, or game. If you wanted ToneDeaf UglyDork to win American Idol, you could command all your bots to visit the American Idol voting page and submit a vote. Since every vote would come from a different IP address, the results would look legitimate. And if the flaws in American e-voting aren’t fixed before 2008, bots just might elect ToneDeaf UglyDork as President, too.
Spam + IM = SPIM
Many IRC bots today have Instant Messenger (IM) and Peer-to-Peer (P2P) components in their attack arsenal. For instance, some bots allow you to send spam to IM channels (nicknamed SPIM ). Attackers commonly send malicious files or URLs to IM users, hoping to infect them with malware. Some bots incorporate commands that allow the bot herder to send these types of IM messages to his bots’ IM buddies. If those buddies then visit the URL or execute an attached file, they get infected with the herder’s bot and become minions in his botnet.
Some bots offer similar commands that help them spread via P2P applications. For instance, Agobot spreads by placing copies of itself in the share directories used by many popular P2P programs such as Kazaa and Limewire. The bot gives its file an enticing name, such as the title of a movie still in theaters. When someone downloads and runs this malicious trojan, their computer becomes another zombie.
Is it just me, or does it smell like bots in here?
In the video, we mentioned that many bots come with packet sniffers. Packet sniffers allow a bot master to see all of the network traffic that passes by his bots, and sometimes all the traffic that passes within the bot victim’s network as well. Attackers can learn a lot by sniffing a network. For instance, a bot herder might capture cleartext logins or see web cookies. They could even passively enumerate your infected network.
Agobot comes with some very advanced packet sniffing capabilities. Rather than sniffing and reporting every single packet, which creates volumes of junk for the herder to parse, Agobot allows a herder to sniff for specific strings or types of traffic. For example, you can command Agobot to capture all the web cookies it sees passing over a network. You can also specifically tell it to only sniff FTP, or IRC logins. In short, if something passes over a network in clear text, Agobot’s sniffing can pinpoint it.
Stay as sharp as the crooks
In our video and this article, we’ve listed the most common “Swiss Army blades” used in bots today. Since botnets are evolving fast, bots could have all-new blades tomorrow. For now, you can protect yourself best by understanding the threat — and following the defense measures we outline in “Malware Analysis: Botnets, Part 3.” Look for it on our Video Tutorials page beginning 17 October, 2007. #
Written by bardissi. Read more great feeds at is source WEBSITE
no comments.
Read more articles on Spyware & Malware and Computer Security and Watchguard and Student Computing and Home Computer Support and Network Infrastructure and Business Computer Support.
- [+] Digg: Feature this article
- [+] Del.icio.us: Bookmark this article
- [+] Furl: Bookmark this article














