MISCELLANEOUS Scanned Documents Spreading ZBot
Four PDF vulnerabilities exploited all in the “good” name of yet another Zbot spam campaign
You know printers. I know you do and you use them regularly if not daily. They sit in a corner of your office and spit pages whenever you make them. Some of these printers can also send scanned documents via e-mail, and I’ll bet that not all of you know something about this feature let alone use it. Well, cyber criminals do know about this and they even found a way to use it for their ill-intended actions.
And here’s how: the malware writers took the e-mail template proprietary to office printers and scanners and used it to distribute…well…spam. More to the point, they “distribute” e-mails disguised as scanned documents sent by a Xerox® WorkCentre Pro scanner and containing a “malicious” attachment in the form of a harmless PDF file.
And the attachment is a wolf in a sheep’s fur. The claimed Xerox WorkCentre Pro scanned document is in fact a malformed PDF file that exploits a bunch (more precisely 4) of Adobe® Acrobat Reader® vulnerabilities such as Collab.collectEmailInfo (CVE-2007-5659), Utilprintf (CVE-2008-2992), Collab.getIcon (CVE-2009-0927), mediaNewplayer (CVE-2009-4324) which are by now old – mostly related to remote code execution.
This malformed PDF file is on a new mission these days: to spread the Zbot.
Short reminder of ZBot operation style: Also known as Zeus, ZeusBot or WSNPoem, is a Trojan designed to steal sensitive information. It messes with certain processes and adds exceptions to the Microsoft® Windows® Firewall so as it is provided with both backdoor and server capabilities. On the one hand, ZBot ships out critical data gathered from the compromised computer, and on the other hand it waits at the gates of some “ports” further commands from remote attackers.
The latest variants are also able to steal bank-related information, login data, history of the visited Web sites and other details the user inputs, while also capturing screenshots of the compromised machine's desktop
Always keep your anti-virus product up to date to help protect you against this type of malicious spyware.
Click Computers – Computer Repair Utah
Click Computers is Utah’s Onsite Computer Repair Specialists for your Home and Business.
Thursday, February 10, 2011
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