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The Opaserv Worm
Windows 95, 98 and ME users, beware of the Opaserv
worm. It is attacking systems by finding unprotected shares
(shares that allow write access to Everyone), and then copying
itself to scrsvr.exe on the victim system. It also changes
the win.ini file in the path C:\windows\win.ini and then creates
a new tmp.ini file in C: with the following entry: run= c:\windows\scrsvr.exe
Some versions try to update themselves by visiting
a web site and then downloading a file, scrupd.exe. Opaserve
then searches more new systems to infect.
The best preventative measures are:
- Make sure that all shares do not allow Everyone to write,
- Ensure your machine has a patch for a vulnerability that
allows someone to connect to passworded shares by simply
entering the first letter of the password (see
Microsoft Security Bulletin [MS00-072]),
- Run antivirus software and ensuring it is updated, and
- Refrain from opening attachments unless you know the sender
and the attachment content.
If your system becomes infected, you can clean your system
with a Symantec
Opaserv removal tool.
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OpenSSH
Trojan Horse
Certain copies of the source code for OpenSSH contain a Trojan
horse program that can allow an attacker to gain unauthorized
access to a system. The following versions are affected:
openssh-3.2.2p1.tar.gz
openssh-3.4p1.tar.gz
openssh-3.4.tgz
FTP servers at ftp.openssh.com and ftp.openbsd.org distributed
this Trojaned version of OPenSSH on July 30 and 21, 2002.
On August 1, the Trojan version was removed from both sites
and a legitimate version once again was distributed. Anyone
who installed OpenSSH from the OpenBSD ftp server or any mirror
within that time frame should consider his/her system compromised.
The Trojan allows the attacker to gain control of the system
as the user compiling the binary. Arbitrary commands can be
executed. For more information see CERT®
Advisory CA-2002-24.
openssh-3.4p1 mismatch checksums errors: The FreeBSD
ports systems does auto MD5 checksumming. Apparently, the
tarball was trojaned via a shell script that is called by
one of the Makefiles, but the openssh program was not.
If you have downloaded the openssh tarball recently, you
should do an md5 checksum of the tarball.
This is the md5 checksum of the openssh-3.4p1.tar.gz in the
FreeBSD
ports system:
MD5 (openssh-3.4p1.tar.gz) = 459c1d0262e939d6432f193c7a4ba8a8
This is the md5 checksum of the trojaned openssh-3.4p1.tar.gz:
MD5 (openssh-3.4p1.tar.gz) = 3ac9bc346d736b4a51d676faa2a08a57
The RH RPMs built for openssh (built back when 3.4p1 just
came out) are all based on the good
tarball.
For more information, see Slashdot:
OpenSSH 3.4p1 package trojaned.
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The Phabot Worm
The Phabot worm is polymorphic (meaning that it can change
itself), enabling it to infect systems and then spread to
others without being detected by anti-virus software. It exploits
vulnerabilities in a large number of services and programs,
including the Distributed Component Object Model (DCOM), DCOM2,
DameWare, the Windows Locator Service, WebDAV, the Windows
Workstation Service, Windows shares, and others. Phabot also
attempts to discover usernames and passwords for Internet
Relay Chat (IRC) channels and FTP server access. If this worm
exploits a
vulnerability on a system, it starts an FTP server on that
system and then transfers a copy of the worm executable (which
is usually named srvhost.exe or svrhost.exe) to the system
folder (which is normally either c: winnt or
C: windows) and modifies the system's Registry so that it
will execute every time the system starts. The particular
Registry keys that Phabot targets are:
HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run, and
HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunServices
Phabot adds a subkey, Generic Service Process, to both keys
and then adds values of "srvhost.exe" or "svrhost.exe"
to these new subkeys.
If Phabot infects a system already infected by MSBlast, Sobig.F,
or Welchia, it eradicates any executables for these worms.
It can create an ident server and can even set up an HTTP,
HTTP-S, or socks proxy for the purpose of
evading network security mechanisms. Phabot also may attempt
to obtain copies of keys for Windows products and CDs, copies
of Paypal cookies, and email messages. If it can connect to
AOL, it attempts to send spam to other
machines, too. Infected systems form a cooperative and malicious
bot network using both Gnutella (a peer-to-peer file sharing
program) and IRC channels. Finally, it can launch a denial
of service (DoS) attack against other systems by
flooding them with HTTP, SYN, and other types of packets.
Cleaning An Infected System
If your system becomes infected by the Phabot worm, you'll
need to clean the infection by at least doing the following
three things:
- Go to the infected machine's system folder and locate
srvhost.exe, svrhost.exe, or possibly an executable with
another name, and then delete it.
- Bring up the Task Manager by pressing CNTL+ALT+DEL. Click
on Task Manager, and then
- Delete the entire "Generic Service Process"
Registry key from
HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run, and
HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunServices
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The
Refoav Worm
The new W32.Refoav@mm worm is spreading rapidly over the
Internet.
Arriving as a message with the subject: "No esta registrado
el usuario," it infects a system if a user on that system
opens the attachment (which is named "FOAVRE.exe").
Refoav copies itself into Windows systems as C:\FOAVRE.exe
and then immediately creates two additional files, C:\Vbseli.vbs
and C:\Datospc.dat. It sets the attributes of each of these
files to Hidden and Archive; it also sets the System attribute
on c:\Datospc.dat. It then adds the value: "Load"="c:\vbseli.vbs"
to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\ Windows\
CurrentVersion\Run in the infected system's Registry, enabling
this worm to run at boot time.
Finally, Refoav uses Microsoft Outlook to transmit itself
to every address in the Outlook Address Book. The best preventative
measures are to refrain from opening attachments from people
you do not know and keepyour system's anti-virus software
current. If your system becomes infected by Refoac, visit
http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/
venc/data/w32.refoav@mm.html for procedures to clean up
systems that have been infected by this worm.
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