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Flame virus hijacked Windows’ last line of defence

Forums Life Computers, Gadgets & Technology Computer Viruses, Trojans & Threats. Flame virus hijacked Windows’ last line of defence

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  • Paul Marks, senior technology correspondentWhen a novel computer threat hits the Windows ecosystem, Microsoft usually broadcasts an update online pretty quickly. That way, 900 million PC users can “patch” the vulnerability that let the threat thrive in the first place. So a nightmare scenario for security engineers has always been this: an attacker creates a smart, spoofed Microsoft update that lets them install a virus rather than a patch.
    Well, it has happened at last.
    Engineers poring over Flame, the powerful (and massive) cyberespionage program that Iranian authorities reported finding in a number of industrial and military facilities last week, have discovered a module among its 20 megabytes of attack tools that creates updates that look like they hail from Microsoft. This marks a watershed in computer (in)security and one for which there is currently no catch-all preventative measure. The reason? Update authenticity relies on the use of digital “certificates” that can be faked.
    “Microsoft is aware of active attacks using unauthorised digital certificates derived from a Microsoft Certificate Authority,” says the Redmond, Washington-based firm in a 3 June security advisory. “An unauthorised certificate could be used to spoof content, perform phishing attacks, or perform man-in-the-middle attacks.”
    It’s such a “man-in-the-middle” attack – a certificate posing as an honest broker between the user’s PC and Microsoft – that allows Flame’s fake update to go ahead. Although that certificate has now been revoked, the mechanism revealed here will doubtless be a cue for copycats. “Techniques used by this malware… could also be leveraged by less sophisticated attackers to launch more widespread attacks,” warns Microsoft.
    But don’t worry, Flame probably isn’t going to hit your PC. It is a highly targetted “toolkit” that appears to be undertaking reconnaissance for future Stuxnet-style attacks on Iranian (or at least Middle Eastern) infrastructure. The US/Israeli-developed Stuxnet worm invaded Iran’s industrial computers and shook almost 1000 uranium centrifuges to pieces – but it needed to know the make, model and connectivity of the controlling computers to do so. Flame appears to have the national security pedigree of Stuxnet and its sister Duqu – and is highly targetted atstealing PDF files, computer-aided design drawings and Microsoft Office documents, presumably so that future software-based attacks can be engineered.
    “This is the first time Microsoft Update has been patched. And it’s a big deal indeed,” says Mikko Hypponen of antivirus software house F-Secure in Finland. “However, we’re lucky, because this attacker is not interested in infecting large numbers of computers. This technique has only been used in very limited and targeted attacks in The Middle East.”
    “The Microsoft Update hack used in Flame must have been very valuable to the attackers. We should assume they’ve used it in other, possibly unrelated attacks at the same time, since they must have known it would be discovered.”
    As for the spoof patch risk, however, all’s fine: Microsoft has released a Windows update.

    One Per Cent: Flame virus hijacked Windows’ last line of defence

    Are they over-hyping this or what?? If the virus came down as a windows patch, then were microsoft involved?? Opinions please

    It does seem like the ultimate malware though. I mean tricking windows means FULL access if am right in thinking. This is by far worse than the LOLCANO virus

    lolcano

    @thelog 482468 wrote:

    Are they over-hyping this or what?? If the virus came down as a windows patch, then were microsoft involved?? Opinions please

    not necessarily. if a govt agent or even corporate employee has a passcard or official ID what lets them into a secure area, carelessly drops it into the gutter, and someone picks it up and then uses it to copy the design and create one for their own use, it doesn’t mean the big organisation was complicit in the breach. No more than the Bank of England would be for forged banknotes, other than to make the design hard to copy. but at the same time a banknote must be recognisable to the folk who are planning to use it and easy to transport…

    MS doesn’t get any gain from being caught up in this as it discourages foreigners from using their systems including those in Europe. They only use them somewhat begrudgingly anyway.

    More worrying is that anyone domestic or foreign is running safety-critical systems off windows boxes exposed to the wider internet in the first place. a former employer fucked over most of the worlds broadcasters in part due to the flakiness of some of Microsofts offerings. There are tried and tested ways of connecting this sort of equipment to computers whilst avoiding fuckups either accidental or deliberate. they might cost slightly more but its worth spending the cash.

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Forums Life Computers, Gadgets & Technology Computer Viruses, Trojans & Threats. Flame virus hijacked Windows’ last line of defence