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Thread: Malware targets security research tool
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| Malware targets security research tool |

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2006-07-07 09:31:17 |
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/07/06/gattmann_virus/
a>
By John Leyden
6th July 2006
Virus writers have created a proof-of-concept virus, dubbed
Gattman,
that targets an analysis tool widely used by anti-virus
researchers.
Only the most inept anti-virus researchers are likely to
become
infected, according to one expert, so the interest in the
malware is
its curiosity value rather than any threat it poses, which
is
virtually nil.
Gattman spreads using a program called Interactive
Disassembler Pro
(IDA), a popular reverse engineering tool from Data Rescue,
widely
used in anti-virus research labs, which converts machine
code inside
program files into a human-readable source code format. The
tool
allows the behaviour of code to be analysed.
The malware infects the scripting language used by IDA,
elements of
which are sometimes shared between researchers during joint
analysis
efforts, to create a Windows executable file. This
executable searches
out new IDC files to create a new executable file. Gattmann
is
programmed only to spread and doesn't feature any malicious
payload.
Gotcha
The exchange of executable files is strictly controlled in
anything
approaching professionally-run security labs.
Carole Theriault, senior security consultant at UK-based
anti-virus
firm Sophos, said the authors of Gattman were presumably
hoping to
embarrass incautious researchers by spreading a virus using
the very
tools of their trade.
"The virus shows some technical knowledge. It was
probably written in
an attempt to embarrass anti-virus firms but it's unlikely
to spread
except among researchers - or more likely malware authors -
who are
both curious and careless," Theriault told El Reg.
"The approach taken
by the virus to spread is rather odd."
Gattman is a polymorphic virus, a technique that has fallen
out of
favour in recent times, which means it alters its appearance
as it
spreads. Both the IDC and EXE parts of this virus can change
their
form as they replicate. The changes in EXE files generated
by Gattman
use file-morphing utilities on each infected PC. Such
utilities are
often found on the PCs of malware researchers but uncommon
more
generally. ®
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