by Corey Nachreiner, CISSP, Network Security Analyst, WatchGuard Technologies
[Editor¡¯s Note: This article supplements the list of attacks shown in Part 2 of the video series, Malware Analysis: Botnets. ¡°Malware Analysis: Botnets, Part 2¡È shows a small subset of botnet attacks in action. This article fills out that subset with more attacks commonly found in a bot herder¡¯s arsenal. LiveSecurity subscribers can find the videos, free of charge, on our Video Tutorials page. –Scott]
You¡¯ll often hear botnets described as a ¡°hacker¡¯s Swiss army knife.¡± Just as a Swiss army knife can come with a crazy variety of blades, scissors, and screwdrivers, bots come with numerous exploits and commands that allow bot herders to launch many different types of attacks.
Since coding up a bot client takes time and skill, most attackers buy bot code in the online underground. Popular malicious bots include Phatbot, Agobot, and the one shown in our video, Rxbot. These bot clients use modular code, so if a bot herder doesn¡¯t love the array of commands his bot offers, he simply adds new ones. For examples, read on.
What pairs better than zombies and spam?
Bot herders commonly leverage their bots as huge spam relays. How huge? According to a recent study by Commtouch, 87% of all email sent over the Internet during 2006 was spam. This e-junk generated up to 1700 terabytes
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