Examples of e-mails with "Storm Worm" in the attachment

The Storm Worm (dubbed so by the Finnish company F-Secure) is a phishing backdoor[1][2] Trojan horse that affects computers using Microsoft operating systems,[3][4][5] discovered on January 17, 2007.[3] The worm is also known as:

The Storm Worm began attacking thousands of (mostly private) computers in Europe and the United States on Friday, January 19, 2007, using an e-mail message with a subject line about a recent weather disaster, "230 dead as storm batters Europe".[6] During the weekend there were six subsequent waves of the attack.[7] As of January 22, 2007, the Storm Worm accounted for 8% of all malware infections globally.[8]

There is evidence, according to PCWorld, that the Storm Worm was of Russian origin, possibly traceable to the Russian Business Network.[9]

Ways of action

Originally propagated in messages about European windstorm Kyrill, the Storm Worm has been seen also in emails with the following subjects:[10]

"During our tests we saw an infected machine sending a burst of almost 1,800 emails in a five-minute period and then it just stopped."

–Amado Hidalgo, a researcher with Symantec's security response group.[11]

  • 230 dead as storm batters Europe. [The worm was dubbed "Storm" because of this message subject.]
  • A killer at 11, he's free at 21 and kill again!
  • U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has kicked German Chancellor Angela Merkel
  • British Muslims Genocide
  • Naked teens attack home director.
  • Re: Your text
  • Radical Muslim drinking enemies' blood.
  • Chinese/Russian missile shot down Russian/Chinese satellite/aircraft
  • Saddam Hussein safe and sound!
  • Saddam Hussein alive!
  • Venezuelan leader: "Let's the War beginning".
  • Fidel Castro dead.
  • If I Knew
  • FBI vs. Facebook
  • USA occupies Iran

When an attachment is opened, the malware installs the wincom32 service, and injects a payload, passing on packets to destinations encoded within the malware itself. According to Symantec, it may also download and run the Trojan.Abwiz.F trojan, and the W32.Mixor.Q@mm worm.[10] The Trojan piggybacks on the spam with names such as "postcard.exe" and "Flash Postcard.exe," with more changes from the original wave as the attack mutates.[11] Some of the known names for the attachments include:[10]

  • Postcard.exe
  • ecard.exe
  • FullVideo.exe
  • Full Story.exe
  • Video.exe
  • Read More.exe
  • FullClip.exe
  • GreetingPostcard.exe
  • MoreHere.exe
  • FlashPostcard.exe
  • GreetingCard.exe
  • ClickHere.exe
  • ReadMore.exe
  • FlashPostcard.exe
  • FullNews.exe
  • NflStatTracker.exe
  • ArcadeWorld.exe
  • ArcadeWorldGame.exe

Later, as F-Secure confirmed, the malware began spreading the subjects such as "Love birds" and "Touched by Love". These emails contain links to websites hosting some of the following files, which are confirmed to contain the virus:

  • with_love.exe
  • withlove.exe
  • love.exe
  • frommetoyou.exe
  • iheartyou.exe
  • fck2008.exe
  • fck2009.exe

According to Joe Stewart, director of malware research for SecureWorks, Storm remains amazingly resilient, in part because the Trojan horse it uses to infect systems changes its packing code every 10 minutes, and, once installed, the bot uses fast flux to change the IP addresses for its command and control servers.[12]

Botnetting

The compromised machine becomes merged into a botnet. While most botnets are controlled through a central server, which if found can be taken down to destroy the botnet, the Storm Worm seeds a botnet that acts in a similar way to a peer-to-peer network, with no centralized control.[7] Each compromised machine connects to a list of a subset of the entire botnet - around 30 to 35 other compromised machines, which act as hosts. While each of the infected hosts share lists of other infected hosts, no one machine has a full list of the entire botnet - each only has a subset, making it difficult to gauge the true extent of the zombie network.[7] On 7 September 2007, estimates of the size of the Storm botnet ranged from 1 to 10 million computers.[13] Researchers from the University of Mannheim and the Institut Eurecom have estimated concurrent online storm nodes to be between 5,000 and 40,000.[14]

Rootkit

Another action the Storm Worm takes is to install the rootkit Win32.agent.dh.[7] Symantec pointed out that flawed rootkit code voids some of the Storm Worm author's plans. Later variants, starting around July 2007, loaded the rootkit component by patching existing Windows drivers such as tcpip.sys and cdrom.sys with a stub of code that loads the rootkit driver module without requiring it to have an entry in the Windows driver list.[15]

April Fool's Day

On April 1, 2008, a new storm worm was released onto the net, with April Fools-themed subject titles.

Feedback

The list of antivirus companies that can detect the Storm Worm include Authentium, BitDefender, ClamAV, eSafe, Eset, F-Prot, F-Secure, Kaspersky, McAfee, Sophos, Symantec, Trend Micro, avast! and Windows Live OneCare.[16] The Storm Worm is constantly being updated by its authors to evade antivirus detection, so this does not imply that all the vendors listed above are able to detect all the Storm Worm variants. An intrusion detection system offers some protection from the rootkit, as it may warn that the Windows process "services.exe" is trying to access the Internet using ports 4000 or 7871.[11] Windows 2000, Windows XP and presumably Windows Vista can be infected by all the Storm Worm variants, but Windows Server 2003 cannot, as the malware's author specifically excluded that edition of Windows from the code.[11] Additionally, the decryption layer for some variants requires Windows API functions that are only available in Windows XP Service Pack 2 and later, effectively preventing infection on older versions of Windows.

Peter Gutmann sent an email[17] noting that the Storm botnet comprises between 1 and 10 million PCs depending on whose estimates you believe. Although Dr. Gutmann makes a hardware resource comparison between the Storm botnet and distributed memory and distributed shared memory high performance computers at TOP500, exact performance matches were not his intention—rather a more general appreciation of the botnet's size compared to other massive computing resources. Consider for example the size of the Storm botnet compared to grid computing projects such as the World Community Grid.

An article in PCWorld [18] dated October 21, 2007 says that a network security analyst presented findings at the Toorcon hacker conference in San Diego on October 20, 2007, saying that Storm is down to about 20,000 active hosts or about one-tenth of its former size. However, this is being disputed by security researcher Bruce Schneier,[19] who notes that the network is being partitioned in order to sell the parts off independently.

Notes

  1. Шуб, Александр. "Штормовой червь" атакует Интернет (in Russian). Retrieved 2007-01-20.
  2. Prince, Brian (January 26, 2007). "'Storm Worm' Continues to Spread Around Globe". FOXNews.com. Retrieved 2007-01-27.
  3. 1 2 3 "F-Secure Trojan Information Pages: Small.DAM". Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  4. According to Symantec, which detected it as Trojan.Packed.8. LiveUpdate definitions also identified it as Trojan.Peacomm
  5. ""Storm worm" sloshes through the internet". 2007-01-19. Retrieved 2007-01-20.
  6. "Storm chaos prompts virus surge". BBC News. 19 January 2007. Retrieved 2007-01-19.
  7. 1 2 3 4 Espiner, Tom (22 January 2007). "'Storm Worm' slithers on". ZDNet. Retrieved 2007-01-22.
  8. Keizer, Gregg (January 22, 2007). "'Storm' Spam Surges, Infections Climb". InformationWeek. Retrieved 2007-01-22.
  9. "The Internet's Public Enemy Number One". PCWorld. Archived from the original on 2009-03-16.
  10. 1 2 3 Suenaga, Masaki (January 22, 2007). "Trojan.Peacomm". Archived from the original on 29 June 2019. Retrieved 2007-01-22.
  11. 1 2 3 4 Keizer, Gregg (January 23, 2007). "'Storm' Trojan Hits 1.6 Million PCs; Vista May Be Vulnerable". InformationWeek. Retrieved 2021-10-06.
  12. Robert Vamosi (August 7, 2008). "Storm Worm". CNET.com.
  13. Peter Gutmann (31 August 2007). "World's most powerful supercomputer goes online". Full Disclosure. Retrieved 2007-08-31.
  14. Kelly Jackson Higgins (23 April 2008). "Researchers Infiltrate and 'Pollute' Storm Botnet". Darkreading.com. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  15. SophosLabs (28 July 2007). "Patching system files: Part II". Sophos. Retrieved 2010-12-05.
  16. Blog entry by Johannes Ulrich, chief technical officer of the SANS Institute's Internet Storm Center
  17. "Peter Gutmann Email".
  18. "Storm Worm Now Just a Squall".
  19. "Schneier on Security: The Storm Worm".
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