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NetWitness Discovers
Kneber botnet - ZeuS Compromise Affects 75K Systems
February 18, 2010
NetWitness
has discovered a dangerous new ZeuS botnet affecting 75,000 systems in
2,500 organizations around the world. The newly-discovered infestation,
dubbed the "Kneber botnet" after the username linking the infected
systems worldwide, gathers login credentials to online financial
systems, social networking sites and email systems from infested
computers and reports the information to miscreants who can use it to
break into accounts, steal corporate and government information, and
replicate personal, online and financial identities.
NetWitness first discovered the Kneber botnet in January during a
routine deployment of the NetWitness advanced monitoring solutions.
Deeper investigation revealed an extensive compromise of commercial and
government systems that included 68,000 corporate login credentials,
access to email systems, online banking sites, Facebook, Yahoo, Hotmail
and other social networking credentials, 2,000 SSL certificate files,
and dossier-level data sets on individuals including complete dumps of
entire identities from victim machines.
Discussing the importance of the Kneber botnet, Amit Yoran, CEO of
NetWitness and former Director of the National Cyber Security Division,
said, "While Operation Aurora shed light on advanced threats from
sponsored adversaries, the number of compromised companies and
organizations pales in comparison to this single botnet. These
large-scale compromises of enterprise networks have reached epidemic
levels. Cyber criminal elements, like the Kneber crew quietly and
diligently target and compromise thousands of government and commercial
organizations across the globe. Conventional malware protection and
signature based intrusion detection systems are by definition inadequate
for addressing Kneber or most other advanced threats. Organizations
which focus on compliance as the objective of their information security
programs and have not kept pace with the rapid advances of the threat
environment will not see this Trojan until the damage already has
occurred. Systems compromised by this botnet provide the attackers not
only user credentials and confidential information, but remote access
inside the compromised networks."
"Many
security analysts tend to classify ZeuS solely as a Trojan that steals
banking information," stated Alex Cox, the Principal Analyst at
NetWitness responsible for uncovering the Kneber-bot, "but that
viewpoint is naive. When we began to detect the correlation among both
the methodology used by the Kneber crew to attack victim machines and
the wide variety of data sets harvested, it became clear that security
teams must rethink their entire perspective on advanced threats such as
ZeuS and consider more diverse mission objectives."
Over half the machines infected with Kneber also were infected with
Waledac, a peer to peer botnet. The coexistence of ZeuS and Waledac
suggests the goals of resilience and survivability and potential deeper
cross-crew collaboration in the criminal underground.
"NetWitness enables the discovery of malicious code like Kneber - before
things get critical and valuable data is lost," said Cox. "It is 100%
certain that many organizations have no idea they are victimized by
these types of problems because they're just not tooled to see them on
their networks. The Kneber botnet is just one category of advanced
threat that organizations have been facing the past few years that they
are still largely ignorant or blind to today." |