Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Malware Hunting for Lazy Idiots

What I want to write about right now is a couple of neat new tricks I figured out while tracking down some malware today. It's JavaScript de-obfuscation and packed executables that won't run in SysAnalyzer. Fun! Especially since this time I was successful, front-to-back. I think I may still post a detailed description. But not right now. I haven't got time. Yards don't mow themselves.

But what I did want to mention was that Niels Provos has released a new version of SpyBye. The cool part is that it built on my Mac with zero difficulty. Ironically, it builds on OpenBSD, but dumps core complaining about an unrecognized symbol from libevent. What's cool about the new SpyBye is the '-x' switch that lets you run it as an interactive proxy from your browser. This makes analysis easier to do since you can let the browser step through the scripts and iframes and all that crap that sucks up your time when trying to do it manually. What's not that cool about SpyBye are the good_patterns/bad_patterns files, and how limited and basic the content is. For example, none of the aforementioned malware or its droppers set off SpyBye. Moreover, the exploit still works on vulnerable browsers. I've been playing with adding regex patterns to the bad_patterns file to get it to detect all of the known-bad stuff I already have Snort signatures for. Once that's done maybe I'll post them up here or e-mail them to Niels or something.

The reason I love the idea of SpyBye, HoneyC, or any other honeyclient-ish tool is that they all imply an easy way to find new malware that your IDS and AV don't already stop. It sounds so much easier than rifling through proxy logs or tcpdump payloads looking for "stuff that don't look right." But I always have a little bit of buyer's (OK, compiler's?) remorse when I get something like SpyBye up and running. Sure, it works the way it was written to work, but it doesn't magically find lots of cool zero-day browser sploits in the wild. Even when I know they're there. I guess finding the "really cool" malware is still hard and requires some luck. Which sucks, because like the title says, I would much rather be a lazy idiot.

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