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Symantec Will Not Detect Magic Lantern

An anonymous reader contributes: "In this article on Declan McCullagh's Politech, Symantec chief researcher Eric Chien stated that provided a hypothetical keystroke logging tool was used only by the FBI, Symantec would avoid updating its antivirus tools to detect such a Trojan, echoing a similar stance Network Associates allegedly took with its McAfee anti-virus software earlier this week. 'If it was under the control of the FBI, with appropriate technical safeguards in place to prevent possible misuse, and nobody else used it -- we wouldn't detect it,' said Chien. 'However we would detect modified versions that might be used by hackers.'"

12 of 582 comments (clear)

  1. Silly to the extreme by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not a conspiracy nut, and I certainly don't have total trust, or total mistrust, of the government either.

    But it isn't the idea of the FBI trying to use these tools that offends me. I expect them too, and I don't have anything to hide. But the issue of a company that I pay money for to help protect me to turn a blind eye to government intrusion is insane.

    If I pay someone to give me security, I expect them to provide it against anyone who wants my information. Pure and simple. And I'm not worried about the "Oh, we won't check the FBI's version - but we would check variants."

    Oh, that makes me feel *much* better. Imagine a cracker getting his fingers on the FBI software and using that on my systems. Gee, thanks for not checking that, Symantec.

    Of course, you have to admit that Symantec and McAfee are in a bind. If they state they're going to detect the FBI software, then they're anti-government. If they don't, then they're aiding big brother. But considering that the United States was formed from a healthy distrust of our government (and that distrust has only proved to help us, thank you Hubert Hoover and your bra collection), I would rather have the security companies on my side and make my government work just a little harder to prove guilt. Or at least, that's what my tax dollars should be going to.

    Of course, this is just my opinion. I could be wrong.

    1. Re:Silly to the extreme by j7953 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      So if you hire private security guards to protect your house, do you expect them to forcibly keep out the FBI when they have a warrant?

      This analogy doesn't work because if the FBI presents a warrant I already know they're searching my house.

      A more accurate analogy might be: What do you expect your security guards to do if they find out that your house is bugged? Should they not tell just because the bugs carry "FBI" labels?

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars)
  2. huh? by new+death+barbie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So they're not going to detect the original, but they WILL detect any hacker-modified clones?

    What about Norton Firewall? Will it still detect unexpected outgoing connections? How can I expect it to reliably detect and permit FBI-approved software, but not hacker software with a similar MO?

    Oh, maybe there'll be a hard-coded IP address in the outgoing connection -- now THERE'S a nice target for DDOS!

    --

    It's supposed to be completely automatic, but actually you have to press this button.

  3. I can hardly wait by r_j_prahad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the time a copy of this "Magic Lantern" is first discovered in the wild until an exact copy of the FBI-approved (and consequently undetectable) version is available via alt.hackers.maliscious is going to take what, twenty minutes?

    Malda might as well start composing (and spellchecking) the headline now, because it's a sure bet he'll get to use it.

  4. Re: a/v software by blibbleblobble · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The FBI? Do anything illegal? Who would ever imagine that such a thing could happen?

    <repressed_memory>

    • Wiretaps of opposition politicians
    • Wiretaps of civil rights protestors
    • Wiretaps of those who voice dissent
    • Wiretaps of people unrelated to any crime investigation

    </repressed_memory>

    Hmmm, I can't seem to think of any examples of how police spy powers have been abused in the past, can you?

  5. Re:Uh, the answer is simple... by czardonic · · Score: 5, Insightful
    yway, I don't use Windows, so this is not my problem. Ask yourself; is it really yours?

    Here's why it IS your problem. If you think the FBI is going to limit their spying to Windows, you are pretty naive. Count on one of the following:

    They will find a way to make it work in every consumer OS.

    They will find some other way to acheive the same thing with other OSs.

    They will outlaw the use of an OS that can be used to evade law enforcement.

    --
    Takahashi Rumiko made beats! DON, taku, DON, taku. . .
  6. just say no by joss · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Symantec are perfectly entitled to do whatever they want. If they want to sell crippled security software, it's their funeral ? Sophos has a more sensible attitude http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/55/23057.html , and better AV software anyway.

    If US software companies want to sell crippleware in the interests of "patriotism" that's their business. There are plenty of companies willing to fill the gap.

    --
    http://rareformnewmedia.com/
  7. international terrorist: fbi by SubtleNuance · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How long until this little app ends up on a PC that is not on US soil? Will some foreign nation be able to make an offical-issue of this? It seems like the FBI might not be thinking this through.

    ... then again, there is Echelon.... apparently no one minds...

  8. Re:Uh, the answer is simple... by bfree · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Sometimes the UScentricities of /. just make me ROFL!

    All that is happening here is that
    • All non-US parties will purchase non-US anti-virus software losing the US anti-virus software produces $xxxxxxxxxx/annum and meaning the US software will have a smaller user base and be more likely to be less secure
    • Every US citizen will have to decide whether to break the law (cause I believe they will outlaw the use of anything which cannot be cracked by the FBI, including all the non-US anti-virus products) or to leave themselves vulnerable
    • The US will spend a massive amount of resources on trying to control this whole issue. The filtering of the Net would be an immediate requirement to try and find people who are using illegal software, or downloading it
    • MY OS will NEVER be vulnerable!! I will always, from some day about 3 years ago, use an OS which is Free where the code can be reviewed, modified and distributed. I can attach hooks into my TCP-IP stacks, network device drivers or any other level I wish to watch for the FBI (or anyone else) trying to track me (or gather any info) and block them at source, but I won't need to cause a 17 year old scandinavian will release a tool to do it for me which will be plastered over the non-US internet
    • The US is well on its way to writing itself out of the rest of the world, and whatever they believe they can't survive alone!

    Sometimes I honestly feel pity for Americans!
    --

    Never underestimate the dark side of the Source

  9. Re:No need to use Norton AV... by babbage · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Yeah. Sure. Just make sure you leave enough of whatever it is you're smoking in that pipe so that we can all get as addled as you are on this one.

    Mac OSX is becoming an interesting case study in Unix For The Masses. Default Linux is, as the Register recently noted, [from memory, can't find a link] "a paragon of Stalinistic control freakery", and that has made it more secure out of the box than the average WinME box, but more importantly it has also scared off millions, and rightly so. Apple's engineers knew well that if they wanted to bring this architecture to the masses -- the way the Gnome & KDE folks do -- then they'd have to encapsulate & hide as much of that control freakery as possible.

    And for the most part they've done a good job, but there have been some serious glitches, like programs that would launch themselves as root, or a broken iTunes installer that wiped out whole disk partitions because of one mistyped "rm" command in an installer script. Pay attention, you seething Linux hordes, because if you want to hit the big time then this is your future. You too will face these problems as the system matures & seeks out a wider audience.

    The only "secure" system is either (pick your punch line) the one that hasn't been built yet, or the one you bought a decade ago and still haven't plugged in yet. All of the others -- all of them -- have problems of one kind or another, and all of them always well. Welcome to real life, kids.

  10. Not these company's job anyway by iabervon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    These companies provide detection and removal services for widely-distributed and automatic attacks. That is to say, it's their job to clean up when someone releases a virus that spreads all over the place. They discover something spreading, and they make an update.

    If the FBI is doing their job well, that's not the situation here. The way they've been describing this working is that they set it up to attack the particular person against whom they've obtained a warrent. It doesn't email itself to the target's addressbook, it doesn't attack random IPs, it doesn't try to infect floppies. That would be both illegal (since it could destroy the data of non-targets) and probably invalidate their evidence (since they don't have a warrent to investigate every individual in the US).

    So a virus scanner shouldn't catch Magic Lantern, because it's not really a virus, in the sense that they're scanning for. It's an attack tool, which uses the methods often employed by viruses. Virus scanners don't fix security holes; they look for particular malicious and spreading code on your computer and clean it up. They won't stop Magic Lantern, they won't stop someone hijacking your passport account, and they won't stop even script kiddies breaking into your webserver, because their purpose and system design just aren't good for that.

    So far I haven't heard of any IDS companies saying they will ignore ML, nor have I heard of any companies saying they won't fix security holes that ML uses. That's what would be significant.

  11. Could Magic Lantern be buit into Windows XP by savaget · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Would it be possible for Magic Lantern to be built into a closed source OS like Windows XP?