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April 2008 virus activity review from Doctor Web, Ltd.

May 12, 2008

As usual the virus monitoring service of Doctor Web, Ltd. кept a watchful eye over viral activities in April.

No doubt the discovery of a new modification of the malware classified by the Dr.Web as BackDoor.MaosBoot became the most notable event of the end of March and in the early April. The program belongs to the new class of viruses that combine features of an MBR virus and a rootkit. BackDoor.MaosBoot mainly targets computers of end users to obtain sensitive financial info. The virus has a long list of bank-client applications. The improved version of the malware easily obtains sensitive information using the list.

In the mid-April the virus monitoring service also detected a surged mailing of an almost forgotten Win32.HLLM.Limar downloader. Though the surge didn't turn into an epidemic, however, the implication was that spreading of the malware on a higher scale should not be ruled out.

Meanwhile, an event of the month is most certainly dispelling the myth that malware known as Rustock.C didn't exist. The virus monitoring service of Doctor Web, Ltd. actually nailed the long elusive rootkit that entered the Dr.Web database as Win32.Ntldrbot. The malicious code is used to turn PCs into spamming bots joined into a vast botnet. Moreover the catching virus was also capable of remaining completely undetected and so it did supposedly since October 2007! According to Secure Works the Rustock botnet is the third among largest botnets and can spam up to 30 billion messages every day. The network mainly advertises pharmaceutical products and securities.

Some features of Win32.Ntldrbot

  • Sophisticated polymorphic protection of the rootkit makes extraction and analysis extremely difficult.
  • Implemented as a driver, it runs on the lowest kernel level.
  • Protects itself, prevents runtime changes.
  • Uses active anti-debugging techniques: monitors setting hardware breakpoints (DR-registers), disrupts operation of kernel-level debuggers (e.g. Syser, SoftIce). WinDbg debugger won’t work, if the rootkit is running.
  • Intercepts system functions using non-standard method.
  • Functions as a file-virus and infects system drivers.
  • A particular sample of the rootkit becomes adjusts to the hardware of an infected machine and most likely won’t run on another computer.
  • Utilizes time-triggered reinfection feature. An old infected file is cured. So the rootkit "wonders" through system drivers infecting only one at a time.
  • Filters calls to an infected file, intercepts FSD-procedures of a file system driver and redirects a call to the original file instead of the infected one.
  • Features anti-rootkit protection.
  • Injects its library to one of the Windows system processes, so the library starts spamming. A driver is connected to the DLL using a special command transfer mechanism.
. It is very important that currently Dr.Web is the only anti-virus capable of detecting and curing a running Win32.Ntldrbot

April 2008 virus statistics

Table 1.Top 20 viruses detected on mail servers

 01.04.2008 00:00 - 13.05.2008 23:00 
1Win32.HLLM.Netsky.35328270654 (29.51%)
2Win32.HLLM.Netsky.based95383 (10.40%)
3Win32.HLLW.Autoruner.43773490 (8.01%)
4Win32.HLLM.MyDoom.based57639 (6.28%)
5Win32.HLLM.Beagle38671 (4.22%)
6Win32.HLLM.Netsky30887 (3.37%)
7Win32.HLLP.Sector30885 (3.37%)
8Exploit.MS05-05328784 (3.14%)
9VBS.Igidak26239 (2.86%)
10Win32.HLLM.Oder22487 (2.45%)
11Win32.Virut20823 (2.27%)
12Win32.HLLM.Perf17012 (1.85%)
13Win32.HLLM.Netsky.2406416739 (1.83%)
14Win32.HLLM.MyDoom.3380811208 (1.22%)
15Win32.HLLM.Netsky.280089592 (1.05%)
16Trojan.DownLoader.495869305 (1.01%)
17Win32.LazyAdmin.327688791 (0.96%)
18Win32.HLLM.Netsky.286728689 (0.95%)
19Trojan.Regger8657 (0.94%)
20Exploit.IframeBO8093 (0.88%)

Table 2. Top 20 viruses detected on PCs

 01.04.2008 00:00 - 13.05.2008 23:00 
1Trojan.Okuks.302184293 (33.03%)
2Trojan.Spambot.30991286403 (19.45%)
3Trojan.Click.17013501156 (7.58%)
4Trojan.Okuks.24172393 (2.61%)
5Win32.HLLM.Generic.440158366 (2.39%)
6JS.Nimda156129 (2.36%)
7Win32.Alman131706 (1.99%)
8Win32.HLLW.Autoruner.437107772 (1.63%)
9VBS.Generic.548104092 (1.57%)
10Adware.SaveNow.12891458 (1.38%)
11Win32.HLLP.PissOff.3686488904 (1.34%)
12Trojan.Recycle82489 (1.25%)
13Trojan.DownLoader.4958677948 (1.18%)
14Win32.HLLP.Jeefo.3635275027 (1.13%)
15BackDoor.Generic.113862350 (0.94%)
16VBS.Igidak49603 (0.75%)
17Win32.HLLP.Neshta48690 (0.74%)
18Win32.HLLM.Lovgate.247851 (0.72%)
19Trojan.NtRootKit.42546560 (0.70%)
20Win32.HLLW.Autoruner33661 (0.51%)



     Other news

2008-05-13April 2008 virus activity review from Doctor Web, Ltd.
2008-05-13Twenty five thousand subscribers of Eltel get protection by Dr.Web AV-Desk™
2008-05-07Dr.Web AV-Desk shields four hundred educational institutions of the Russian university network RUNNet
2008-05-06New version of Dr.Web anti-virus scanner for Windows released
2008-05-06Win32.Ntldrbot (aka Rustock.C) no longer a myth, no longer a threat. New Dr.Web scanner detects and cures it for real
2008-05-05Another 17 Russian cities get anti-virus as a service with Dr.Web AV-Desk
2008-05-04Protection against viruses and spam from Doctor Web, Ltd. and Sun Microsystems thoroughly tested
2008-05-04Another Russian ISP launches Dr.Web AV-Desk
2008-05-02Doctor Web – Central Asia Kazakhstan market summary 2007
2008-05-02Doctor Web came to China at the eve of Olympics
2008-04-08PC Magazine Russia: Dr.Web AV-Desk – the best product-as-a-service of 2007
2008-04-07Dr.Web for IBM Lotus Domino – a new product by Doctor Web, Ltd. protecting application servers of enterprises and corporations
2008-04-03Updated Dr.Web Shell Extension library released
2008-04-03Dr.Web for Unix Mail servers and Dr.Web Mail Gateway have been updated to version 4.44.1
2008-04-02March 2008 virus activity review from Doctor Web, Ltd.
2008-04-01Updated version of Dr.Web Enterprise Suite 4.44.2 released
2008-04-01Dr.Web scanner vanquishes BackDoor.MaosBoot once again
2008-04-01Updated modules of Dr.Web anti-virus for Windows workstations released

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Doctor Web, Ltd. © 2008 Doctor Web, Ltd. - a Russian company developing and distributing Dr.Web® Anti-virus solutions.
Our customers can be found among home users from all regions of the world and in large enterprises, small companies and nationwide corporations. We thank all of them for support and long-term devotion to our product. State certificates and awards received by the Dr.Web Anti-virus, as well as the geography of our users are the best evidence of exceptional trust to the products created by the talented Russian programmers.