Since Saturday, there's a worm actively spreading through (mainly) Skype as well as Messenger (Windows Messenger, Microsoft MSN Messenger).
Someone who's infected with this worm will send you the following message:
|
Message in German asking to check your cool pictures |
The link refers to
goo.gl and is actually Google's URL Shortener service. You'll land on Hotfile.com, which is a legitimate file sharing website. (it's not the first time Hotfile has been used to spread malware, read more
here. The file has already been removed by Hotfile.)
|
Links refers to Hotfile and will immediately download a ZIP file. |
Positive thing is that it is a ZIP file and not an EXE. This means the user still has to manually unpack and run the malware. Inside our ZIP file we'll find the following file, which is covered as a Skype setup file:
|
Looks like the real deal. But it's not. |
When executing this file, another file (a random 4 character EXE) will be dropped to the
%appdata% folder of the currently logged on user:
|
The icon suggests it's uTorrent. But it's not. |
This file will try to connect to
api.wipmania.com, waiting for instructions. Additionally, it tries to connect to the following IP addresses:
74.208.112.178 - IPVoid
Result
87.106.98.157 - IPVoid
Result
199.15.234.7 - IPVoid
Result
213.165.71.142 - IPVoid
Result
213.165.71.153 - IPVoid
Result
217.160.108.147 - IPVoid
Result
Now, how do we know how it spreads and which messages it can display? The file extracted from the ZIP archive -
skype_05102012_image.exe looks for the following processes:
msnmsgr.exe
msmsgs.exe
skype.exe
It will then automatically send a message, based on the OS language. It uses the following list to spread:
tas ir jusu jauna profila bildes?
seo do grianghraf prl nua?
ont uusi profiilikuva?
nai aft a fotografa profl sas?
sa kvo profili lusankary aquesta
s la teva nova foto de perfil?
hey ito sa iyong larawan sa profile?
hey lanh tieu cua ban?
hey ini foto profil?
hei zhni de gn zilio zhopin ma?
ni phaph porfil khxng khun?
hej er det din nye profil billede?
hej je to vasa nova slika profila?
hej je to tvuj nov obr zek profilu?
hei er dette din nye profil bilde?
hey la tua immagine del profilo nuovo?
hej to jest twj nowy obraz profil?
hej jeli ovo vasa nova profil skila?
hey bu yeni profil pic?
hej detta är din nya profilbild?
tung, cka paske lyp ti nket fotografi?
moin , kaum zu glauben was für schöne fotos von dir auf deinem profil
hey is dit je nieuwe profielfoto?
ez az j profil ksta tu foto de perfil nuevo?
hey essa sua foto de perfil? rsrsrsrsrsrsrs
hey c'est votre nouvelle photo de profil?
hoi schoni fotis hesch du uf dim profil ppe n
lol is this your new profile pic?
It will then add the link and subsequently adds
your username after the equals '=' sign :
http://goo.gl/QYV5H?img=
Let's take a closer look at the files:
skype_05102012_image.exe
Result:
23/44
MD5: 98f74b530d4ebf6850c4bc193c558a98
Anubis
Report
Malwr
Report
ThreatExper
Report
36A9.exe
Result:
16/44
MD5: 0d4b7f4c1731c91dff56afce0ecf37c5
Anubis
Report
Malwr
Report
ThreatExpert
Report
The malware is commonly identified as Worm.Dorkbot and Worm.Agent or Generic Trojan.
Microsoft provides a description:
Win32/Dorkbot is a family of IRC-based worms that spreads via removable drives, instant messaging programs, and social networks. Variants of
Win32/Dorkbot
may capture user names and passwords by monitoring network
communication, and may block websites that are related to security
updates. It may also launch a limited
denial of service (
DoS) attack.
On my testmachines there was no additional malware downloaded, even after replicating a few times. Several variants of malware can however always be downloaded, whether it's ransomware, rogueware....
Conclusion
Worms spreading through Facebook, Twitter as well as IRC, MSN and Skype is nothing new. Still, it appears to be very successful as human curiosity wins in cases of doubt:
"
Do I really have (embarassing) pictures of myself on this website? Better take a look!"
No, no, no!
Never click on unknown links, especially when a URL shortener service like
goo.gl is used. (others are for example
t.co,
bit.ly,
tinyurl, etc.)
Don't be fooled by known icons or "legit" file descriptions, this can easily be altered.
Even if you clicked the link and you're not suspicious, you should be when a file is downloaded and no pictures are shown, but just an EXE file.
For checking what is really behind a short URL, you can use:
http://getlinkinfo.com/
http://longurl.org/
For checking whether a file is malicious or not:
https://www.virustotal.com/
http://virusscan.jotti.org/