Providing Free and Editor Tested Software Downloads
< HOME | TUTORIALS | GEEK-CADE| WEB TOOLS | YOUTUBE | NEWSLETTER | DEALS! | FORUMS | >

MajorGeeks.com - What about a nice warm cup of Geek?

Software Categories

All In One Tweaks
Android
Antivirus & Malware
Appearance
Back Up
Browsers
CD\DVD\Blu-Ray
Covert Ops
Drivers
Drives (SSD, HDD, USB)
Games
Graphics & Photos
Internet Tools
Linux Distros
MajorGeeks Windows Tweaks
Multimedia
Networking
Office & Productivity
System Tools

Other news

· How To and Tutorials
· Life Hacks and Reviews
· Way Off Base
· MajorGeeks Deals
· News
· Off Base
· Reviews


Opera One
Everything
you need.
Already
there.
AI assistant
Aria, built right in
Free VPN
No account needed
Ad blocker
Faster, cleaner web
Tab Islands
Grouped browsing
Useful sidebars
Make it yours
No Clunky Extensions Needed.



MajorGeeks Approved.



Download free

spread the word

· YouTube
· Facebook
· Instagram
· Twitter
· Pintrest
· RSS/XML Feeds
· News Blur
· Yahoo
· Symbaloo

about

· Top Freeware Picks
· Malware Removal
· Geektionary
· Useful Links
· About Us
· Copyright
· Privacy
· Terms of Service
· How to Uninstall

top downloads

1. GS Auto Clicker
2. Smart Defrag
3. Macrium Reflect FREE Edition
4. K-Lite Mega Codec Pack
5. MusicBee
6. Microsoft Visual C++ 2015-2022 Redistributable Package
7. Sergei Strelec's WinPE
8. Visual C++ Redistributable Runtimes AIO Repack
9. K-Lite Codec Pack Full
10. McAfee Removal Tool (MCPR)
More >>

top reads

Star How To Set a Metered Connection for a Wi-Fi Network in Windows 11

Star How To View All Installed Programs and Apps in Windows 11

Star How To Find a Drive's File System Type

Star How Much Storage Space Are Your Installed Apps Using in Windows 11?

Star How To Reset and Fix the Settings App in Windows 11

Star How To Remove the Windows 11 Updated Start Menu

Star How To Download a Windows 11 ISO

Star How To Disable Drag Tray

Star How To Boot Into WinRE (Windows Recovery Environment)

Star How To Find the Installation Date of Apps


MajorGeeks.Com » News » August 2012 » New Malware Steals Data, Overwrites MBR

New Malware Steals Data, Overwrites MBR


Contributed by: Email on 08/17/2012 11:56 AM [ comments Comments ]


A new piece of malware known as Shamoon that has the ability to destroy files on infected machines and overwrite the master boot record has researchers scratching their heads, wondering what the tool's purpose might be and why the attackers behind it would destroy infected PCs. There are some indications that the malware could be related to Wiper, but researchers believe this is a red herring.

The Shamoon malware came to light on Thursday when researchers at Kasperksy Lab said that they had analyzed samples that included some odd and puzzling characteristics. One module in the malware has a string with a name that includes "wiper" as part of it, something that could point to a connection to the Wiper or Skywiper malware discovered earlier this year. Wiper was erasing files from disks, but it doesn't appear that the two are connected at this point.

"Our opinion, based on researching several systems attacked by the original Wiper, is that it is not. The original “Wiper” was using certain service names (“RAHD...”) together with specific file names for its drivers (“%temp%\~dxxx.tmp”) which do not appear to be present in this malware. Additionally, the original Wiper was using a certain pattern to wipe disks which again is not used by this malware," Kaspersky researchers said.

However, researchers at Seculert who looked at Shamoon found that the malware not only has the ability to destroy data on infected PCs, but it also can overwrite the machine's MBR, making the PC essentially useless. They discovered that before Shamoon executes its destructive instructions, it collects data from various files on the infected machine and then feeds that data to another infected PC on the same internal network. It's a confusing routine, but there may be a reason for it.

"The attacker took control of an internal machine connected directly to the internet, and used that machine as a proxy to the external Command-and-Control (C2) server. Through the proxy, the attacker infected the other internal machines, which were probably not connected directly to the internet," Aviv Raff, Seculert CTO, said in his analysis.

After the attackers got whatever information they wanted off of the Shamoon-infected PCs, they then executed the instructions to delete the data on the hard disk and overwrite the MBR. Shamoon then communicates the results back to the command-and-control server through the internal proxy, Seculert said.

The intent of the attackers behind the Shamoon malware isn't too clear at this point, but the tool is collecting data from infected machines and sending off to parts unknown. That puts it in the league of the cyber espionage tools that have become the favored weapons of attackers of late.





« Boston unbans Uber, cabbies fear for ... our lives? · New Malware Steals Data, Overwrites MBR · Gigapixel 3D Wall Display Costs $80,000 »




Comments
comments powered by Disqus

MajorGeeks.Com » News » August 2012 » New Malware Steals Data, Overwrites MBR

© 2000-2026 MajorGeeks.com
Powered by Contentteller® Business Edition