Hackers Embraced P2P Concept

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Hackers Embraced P2P Concept

Internet security experts in the private sector and U.S. government
are monitoring the emergence of a new, highly sophisticated hacker
tool that uses the same peer-to-peer (P2P) networking abilities that
power controversial file-sharing networks like Kazaa and BearShare.

By some estimates, hundreds of thousands of computers running
Microsoft's Windows operating system have already been infected
worldwide. The tool, a program that security researchers have dubbed
"Phatbot," allows its authors to gain control over computers and link
them into P2P networks that can be used to send large amounts of spam
e-mail messages or to flood Web sites with data in an attempt to knock
them offline.

The new hacker threat caught the attention of cyber-security officials
at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, prompting the agency to
send an alert last week to a select group of computer security
experts. In the alert, the agency warned that Phatbot snoops for
passwords on infected computers and tries to disable firewall and
antivirus software.

A copy of the DHS alert was made available to washingtonpost.com by
two sources at different companies who asked that their identities not
be used because they did not want to risk losing access to future
government alerts. Officials at the department and US-CERT -- a
government-funded cyber-security monitoring agency -- confirmed that
the message was genuine.

Phatbot is "a virtual Swiss Army knife of attack software," said
Vincent Weafer, senior director of security response at Cupertino,
Calif.-based Symantec Corp.

Joe Stewart, a researcher at the Chicago-based security firm Lurhq,
has catalogued Phatbot's many capabilities in an online posting. Those
capabilities include: the "ability to polymorph on install in an
attempt to evade antivirus signatures as it spreads from system to
system"; "steal AOL account logins and passwords"; "harvest emails
from the web for spam purposes" and "sniff [Internet] network traffic
for Paypal cookies."

Phatbot is a kind of "Trojan horse," a type of program named after the
legendary stealth attack because it let hackers take quiet control of
unsecured computers. Security firms have catalogued hundreds if not
thousands of Trojan horse programs in recent years, but Phatbot has
raised substantial concern because it represents a leap-forward in its
sophistication and is proving much harder for law enforcement
authorities and antivirus companies to eliminate.

Like traditional Trojan horse programs, Phatbot infects a computer
through one of several routes, such as through security flaws in
Microsoft's Windows operating system or through "backdoors" installed
on machines by the recent "Mydoom" and "Bagle" Internet worms.

But because Phatbot links infected computers into a larger network,
hackers can issue orders to the infected machines through many routes,
and cyber-security officials can only effectively shut down a Phatbot
attack if they track down every infected computer.

"The concern here is that the peer-to-peer like characteristics of
these 'bot networks may make them more resilient and more difficult to
shut down," said a cyber-security official at the Department of
Homeland Security who asked not be identified because the agency is
still considering whether to issue a more public alert about Phatbot.

"With these P2P Trojan networks, even if you take down half of the
affected machines, the rest of the network continues to work just
fine," said Mikko Hypponen, director of F-Secure, an antivirus
software company based in Finland.

Most major antivirus products detect Phatbot, but as soon as the
Trojan infects computers it disables many antivirus and firewall
software tools.

Roger Lawson, director of computing and information technology at the
University of Vermont in Burlington, said he quarantined more than 200
computers -- more than 5 percent of the machines on the school's
network -- because of Phatbot infestations. None of the school's
antivirus programs detected the Trojan, and attempts to delete it
caused Phatbot to recreate and restart itself, he said.

Phatbot's ability to disable computer security software means that the
estimated number of infected computers could rise to as high as
"several hundred thousand," said F-Secure's Hypponen.

A few computer experts said the rate of infection is much higher.

Igor Ybema, a network administrator at the University of Twente in
Enschede in The Netherlands, put the number between 1 million and 2
million computers. His conclusion was based on a Phatbot command that
forces infected computers to test their Internet connection speed by
sending a file to one of 22 specifically selected Web servers around
the world -- one of them at Twente.

He said Twente began monitoring traffic from computers running the
tests in mid-February, about the time that rival hacker gangs began an
online turf war that resulted in a volley of new worms like Bagle and
"Netsky." By early last week, Ybema said he was tracking an average of
200,000 to 300,000 Internet addresses running the speed test every
day. Ybema believes such traffic indicates that attackers who have
previously relied on less advanced remote-access Trojans are now using
Phatbot.

The majority of the infections appeared to come from home user
broadband connections and from colleges and universities in the United
States and the Asia-Pacific region, he said.

Earlier this month, computer network engineers at University of
California, Santa Cruz monitored the same type of speed testing
traffic as Twente's Ybema observed. Mark Boolootian, the network
engineer who discovered the activity, said one reason infected
computers may be conducting the speed tests is to give Phatbot authors
an idea of which infected computers would be the fastest in sending
out large amounts of spam or data aimed at overwhelming a major Web
site.

Security experts are divided on whether a full-force phatbot attack
will result in ruin or simply a ruinous headache.

"If there are indeed hundreds of thousands of computers infected with
Phatbot, U.S. e-commerce is in serious threat of being massively
attacked by whoever owns these networks," said Russ Cooper, a chief
scientist at Herndon, Va.-based TruSecure Corp.

There are several incidents in the past several years that show how
hackers used multiple ensnared computers to cause damage. In February
2000, a Canadian juvenile commandeered high-speed computers at
University of California, Santa Barbara to knock Amazon, eBay,
CNN.com, and a host of other Web sites off-line for hours. In October
2002, hackers used an army of commandeered computers to assault the 13
root servers that serve as the roadmap for Internet traffic.

But Lurhq's Stewart said his analysis of Phatbot indicates that the
Trojan is designed to link computers into groups no larger than 50
computers, which would significantly limit the Trojan's effectiveness
as a denial-of-service tool.

As a result, he said, Phatbot-infected PCs will more likely be used as
highly effective spamming machines.




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