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The Blaster Worm

The Blaster worm (also known as Lovsan, W32/Lovsan, W32.Blaster, Win32.Poza, WORM_MSBLAST.A, and W32/Blaster-A) is a Windows worm that exploits a well-publicized vulnerability in Microsoft’s remote procedure call (RPC) interface (see Microsoft Security Bulletin MS03-026.) By remotely connecting to TCP port 135 on each system it attacks, this worm downloads and then runs msblast.exe on each vulnerable system, thereby infecting the system. One of the main indications that Blaster has infected a system is that the system slows down, displays unexplained error messages, or crashes.

The Blaster Worm makes changes in the Registry of each infected system to ensure that it restarts every time the infected system boots. Additionally, it spawns a Trojan horse command shell that is accessible via TCP port 4444. It also attempts to cause denial of service in Windows Update to keep each system from downloading the previously mentioned patch. Finally, this worm scans for other systems to infect.

To Prevent Infection

The best way to prevent an infection is to download the latest post service pack fixes Security/Service patch for your system.

Windows NT4 Server
Windows NT4 Workstation
Windows 2000
Windows XP

To determine what version of Windows your system runs, go from Start to Run and then enter "winver".

If you've never installed a patch before, see How to Download the Latest Windows NT, Windows 2000, and Windows XP Systems Security Patches.

If Your System Is Infected

If your system becomes infected, follow the procedures on
http://www.lbl.gov/ITSD/Security/Scans/monthlyfix/blaster.htm. If the clean-up tool available at that site does not eradicate this worm completely, you’ll need to manually clean up your system using the procedures described on Symantec's Blaster Worm Security Response Web page. For information on the vulnerability that this worm exploits, see Critical Vulnerability in Windows Remote Procedure Call (RPC) Service

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Welchia, a Blaster Variant

The recent appearance of the W32.Welchia worm has wreaked havoc on internal networks of large corporations, making it even more difficult for IT administrators to clean up after the Blaster worm.

This Blaster variant targets Windows systems already infected by Blaster. Systems vulnerable to Welchia are the Microsoft IIS Web Server, Windows 2000, and Windows XP. Welchia, also known as Blaster.D and Nachi, lives up to the Blaster name causing system instability on multiple fronts—deleting files, creating more network traffic, and compromising security settings.

Once on a system, Welchia deletes msblast.exe (the Blaster worm), then tries to download the RPC patch from Microsoft's Windows Update Web site, install the patch, and then reboot the computer. Although it purports to be a “good” worm, it can crash systems and can misinstall the patch so that it doesn’t really work. In addition, once on a system, Welchia creates more network traffic by pinging [fn1] to check for active machines to infect, and it exploits a Windows vulnerability that hackers can also use to remotely add and manage content on a Web server.

Welchia propagates through TCP port 135 on Windows XP and Windows 2000 machines that have not patched the vulnerability in the Windows Remote Procedure Call (RPC) Service. Additionally, the worm propagates through TCP port 80 on Microsoft IIS 5.0 systems that have not patched the vulnerability in the Windows WebDav (ntdll.dll) Buffer Overflow.

Protecting Your System Against Welchia

Users and administrators are strongly urged to ensure that patches have been applied to fix vulnerabilities in the Windows Remote Procedure Call (RPC) Service and Windows WebDav Buffer Overflow.

THE TOOLS: Removal Tools

Welchia Removal Tool
Blaster Removal Tool

THE TOOLS: Patches

Windows NT4 Server
Windows NT4 Workstation
Windows 2000
Windows XP

THE STEPS: Recovering from Welchia

THE STEPS: Recovering from Welchia

Follow the steps in Recovering from MS Blaster and its Variant, Welchia. Note: If you have already run Blaster, you will need to run it again.

[fn1] Ping: a command that uses the Internet Control Message Protocol (a TCP/IP extension) to determine whether a remote computer is active and where it can be contacted.

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