Hi avast forum members,
Four-year-old Neeris worm copies Conficker's attack strategies,
April 5, 2009 (Computerworld) An old, but little-known worm has copied some of the infection strategies of Conficker, the worm that raised a ruckus last week, Microsoft security researchers said late Friday.
Neeris, which harks to May 2005, is now exploiting the same Windows bug that Conficker put to good use, and is spreading through flash drives, another Conficker characteristic, said Ziv Mador and Aaron Putnam, researchers with the Microsoft Malware Protection Center.
According to Mador and Putnam, Neerisā makers recently added an exploit for the MS08-067 vulnerability that Microsoft patched last October. The emergency update ā one of the rare times Microsoft has issued a patch outside its usual monthly scheduled ā fixed a flaw in the Windows Server service, which is used for file- and print-sharing by Windows PCs.
Conficker, the worm that began using a new communications scheme to receive commands from its hacker controllers last Wednesday, exploited the same MS08-067 vulnerability to devastating effect in late 2008 and early 2009. During January, for instance, Conficker infected millions of machines, many of them by exploiting MS08-067.
āNeeris [also] spreads via Autorun,ā Mador and Putnam said in an entry to the malware centerās blog. āThe new Neeris variant even adds the same āOpen folder to view filesā AutoPlay option that Conficker does.ā
Conficker spread from infected PCs by adding an autorun.inf file to the root directory of any USB-based device, primarily flash drives. Later, when the drive was connected to an uninfected computer, the autorun.inf file silently copied the worm to the machine.
Mador and Putnam speculated that the authors of Conficker and Neeris might be in cahoots. āThe earliest samples of Neeris date back to May of 2005, so it seems the Conficker authors may be the copycats here,ā the argued. āBut the Neeris authors added the MS08-067 vector later. Therefore it is possible that these miscreants somehow collaborate or at least are aware of each otherās āproducts.āā
Coincidentally, the newest version of Neeris started appearing late on March 31 and on the following day, April 1. The latter date was when Conficker boosted the number of domains it could use to route instructions from its controllers, a deadline that sparked a frenzy of doomsday warnings.
āHowever, [Neeris] was not downloaded by any Conficker variant and thereās no evidence that itās related to [Conficker.cās] April 1 domain algorithm activation,ā said Mador and Putnam.
Although Neeris was first identified nearly four years ago, Microsoft has not added a āfingerprintā for the worm to its Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT), the anti-malware utility that the company updates and redistributes each month to Windows machines. The MSRT scans for known malware, then scrubs the system of any it finds. Microsoft added Conficker detection to the MSRT in mid-January.
āDue to the similarities to Conficker, most of the mitigations that were mentioned also apply here,ā said Mador and Putnam. āMake sure to install MS08-067 if you havenāt done so yet and be careful to use only AutoPlay options youāre familiar with, or consider disabling the Autorun altogether.ā
source: http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9131139