Rustock Botnet Responsible For 40% of Spam
angry tapir writes "More than 40 percent of the world's spam is coming from a single network of computers that computer security experts continue to battle, according to new statistics from Symantec's MessageLabs' division. The Rustock botnet has shrunk since April, when about 2.5 million computers were infected with its malicious software that sent about 43 billion spam e-mails per day. Much of it is pharmaceutical spam."
Hunt them down and kill them all
Please
The emails look the same, generally, etc. Still, a nice "fun fact".
So if they can identify these botnets, and they know this spam is coming from them...
Do they know what IP addresses these bots are connecting from? Is it possible to make a blacklist? How can I avoid accepting mail from these 2.5 million computers?
$x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
$x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
Much of it is pharmaceutical spam.
A very particular kind of pharmaceutical.
Make your girl happy with your long and huge meat machine.
*link to .ru website*
First and foremost, don't expect ANY help from the "security" companies like Symantec and the like, SOLVING this problem would mean the end to their extortion business.
And, don't expect ANY help from the "white hats" in general, all they can do is walk in circles pontificating about how it would be unethical to hack these networks and bring them down.
So really, the only solution is the possibility of someone with "black hat" skilz that wants to be paid to take the system down outside the "law".
If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
Is it to order some of their crap. Track down where the money goes.
And kill them.
We've spent more doing less millions of times... Why don't we get around to fixin this problem?
Find their ip address and sick 4chan on them maybe then something will get done.
Kill it at the source, the ones actually responding to the bloody e-mails. If no one responded they'd dry up in no time.
Yes, it's called the internet.
[Mobster Don is gunned down seconds before cops arrest him]
"Amazing..."
"What?"
"She did in 10 seconds what we've been trying to do for ten years."
"What?"
"Put Masucci out of business, permanently."
Wunna these days, some bright young researcher with more brains than sense is gonna get inside one of these things.
They're gonna get inside, suss out all the details, and then insert their own payload. And it's going to go to every single infected computer and execute just a few lines of code after a reboot:
echo on /Y
echo Your machine was infected with a virus/trojan, turning it into a zombie.
echo You have been contributing to the 43 billion spam per day.
echo Because you fail at the Internet, your machine and all of it's data are forfeit.
echo Have fun, and better luck next time.
format c:
Us Ubuntu and Mac users will not give you peace nor rest until Windows is dead, because YOUR owned machines send OUR email accounts and blogs and forums and mailing lists spam. We're all in this together, and what one person runs affects the rest of us, whether you like it or not.
IANAL but it would seem to me that the pharmaceutical companies that benefit from this (and yes if no one paid attention to spam it would go away, the fact it's still here means people respond to it) should have responsibility in the computer crimes taking place here.
*DrugCheese rants*
This is like the corporate/university computers that re-image themselves every night against the central server, deleting anything that changed on the hard disk. That would be an awesome feature for a dumb web-surfing box for the idio---parents. Would be a little bit of a pain for everyone else, but we can avoid getting infected, right?
"Maybe what we need are a few good old fashioned hangings." -- Commissioner Orson Swindell, Federal Trade Commission
at the first FTC spam conference.
"I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
Subject: Stiffy In A Jiffy
From: Erection Perfection
Nothing worthwhile ever happens before noon
My email accounts only get spam from people trying to steal my battle.net password, on the order of several messages per day. I wonder where it comes from? Once I would have said China, but now I'm not so sure.
You can fairly easily set it up so that when machines reboot, all changes are lost. It's convenient for a lot of applications.
No good. They'd just get infected the next day from some compromised banner rotation and the botnet would install itself in two minutes.
There's a spot in User Info for World of Warcraft account names? Really?
You have a high seven digit user ID, so perhaps you don't know the reason for that. It was an April Fools joke: Slashdot Launches User Achievements.
Posting AC as this is off-topic.
Now the port scan spams on the other hand.. Sure, I can block them, but the sheer load is causing DoS issues. What can I do about that?
How many jobs would be lost if this botnet was taken down?
Companies like Symantec and Norton didn't start off as antivirus companies. They build tools and utilities. If by some miracle all of the botnets, trojans, and virus infections were to vanish from the world, I imagine that they would go back to making tools. It was virus makers that created the market, not Symantec and Norton.
I suppose you think cancer researchers don't really want to find a cure, because then they'd lose their funding, right?
The fact that you are marked as insightful is baffling. You have a distorted sense of reality.
I won't even bother commenting on your "white hats" criticisms, since that's been pretty well covered by others...
However, to say that *your* solution is the only solution is not only short-sighted, it's arrogant. Black Hat "skilz" must be the mystery reason why about half the number of systems are infected now, right?
There isn't a magic bullet solution that will magically fix the problem completely, aside from getting rid of the internet (and maybe humanity too!). It has to be fought on multiple fronts and incorporating multiple solutions to mitigate the problem and hopefully if it's made difficult enough or they have enough that they can lose, then maybe it will stop... but it's much more likely that we're always going to be stuck with it to at least some degree.
The problem with that is the software that does the re-imaging requires network services among other things. In other words it's running on top of a platform that can be rooted. So while you think you're doing a complete re-image, that may not be the whole story.
Tell me I'm not the first to think of this. Just pay and spam some traceable ads... It has to be illegal enough that you can subpoena financial records of individuals, probably mostly credit cards. If you know who first took the money surely one can trace it to the bot net(s) that finally emailed it... Surely there will be a number of middle men and they will try to hide their activities though stolen credit card number and such. But it would be traceable if anyone took the time to do it.
That's the only way to be sure.
We've been chasing spammers for decades, like a dog chasing a car, with an equal lack of success. Why not skip over the spammers and go for the companies that use them to advertise? They can't be anonymous, else they would gain no benefit from advertising through spam. If we nail enough of them, market demand for spam adverts will dry up and spam merchants will have to find other employment, like handing out pamphlets to passing motorists at street intersections. At least then you can ride over them if they irritate you.
Run it in a VM with an immutable base disk image and a difference disk that gets thrown out every time it boots.
Update the base image periodically vs new threats.
While it's probably POSSIBLE to root the host of the VM you are running in, I'm willing to bet that it's too much effort for most spammermeisters right now.
Our taxes pay agencies boasting their purported capability to do just that. If they let bot-herders proliferate for years, how are they supposed to be more efficient against terrorists not entirely dissimilar in organization (and with the first able to turn into the latter at any time by using/"renting out" their botnets as Weapons of Mass Disruption e.g. for DDoS attacks against critical infrastructures)?
Hm lets see, 2.5 million Windows computers in one botnet agains 0 Linux computers world wide. I would say Dell was right:
"6) Ubuntu is safer than Microsoft Windows: The vast majority of viruses and spyware written by hackers are not designed to target and attack Linux." from http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/06/14/dell_ubuntu_windows_security/
http://www.mueller-public.de - My site http://www.anr-institute.com/ - Advanced Natural Research Institute
No fear, as long as it's Windows. It will lock up or otherwise asplode within 3 minutes anyways :P
For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
> about 2.5 million computers were infected with its malicious software ..
What Operating System did this `malicious software' run on, how were they infected. Is the supplier of the OS legally responsible for supplying such defective software ?
Why isn't the Microsoft malicious software removal thing wiping these botnets out in their millions?
No sig today...
Hang on a second here...if 2.5 million computers are sending 43 billion emails per day, that equates to an average of 17,200 emails per machine per day.
It would seem to me that ISPs should have an easy time detecting and blocking this level of activity... that's more email than my entire company (approx 50 users) sends in a month! Shouldn't it be pretty damned obvious that Gramma couldn't possibly be sending out that many emails??
If we can't rely on the end users to be savvy enough to protect themselves from these infections, then the onus has to be pushed back on the software vendors and the ISPs because they have the expertise and the resources to take measures to prevent or deal with these things.
It was an April Fools joke, and would have been funny if they'd removed it on the second of April. Now it's just tragic.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
silentcoder, do you realize where most of the attacks come from nowadays? Via vulnerable apps, & especially browsers + email programs that use HTML & Javascript...
So, that all "said & aside": Are you trying to tell us that LINUX is immune to attack via javascripted attacks??
(I really would like to see your answer in regards to this...)
APK
P.S.=> See, imo, Windows is the most attacked due to most of its users NOT being "techie types" and the fact that more folks use Windows as well, so hacker/cracker types exploit that, AND the fact its install system is not as you stated Linux is, which IS good via repos & having to use sudo type measures with root pwd use on installs, direct installs that is, not ones sent onto your disks via scripted attacks as I allude to above!
(KUbuntu 10.04.1 user here (Slackware 1.12 from 1994 was my first Linux in 1994 iirc), as well as PC-BSD 8.1 & Windows 7,currently + all 64-bit & using computers all the way from DEC PDP-11's & VAX-1180's & IBM System 34/36/38 in the 1980's into PC's of today from CPM as the OS, to DOS + Win3.x, to OS/2, into NT & various *NIX variants of today/onwards)
I also feel that Linux does have "security-by-obscurity" going for it, in the fact it is less used, thus less worth attacking by crackers. Crackers are like pickpockets who use trainstations & subways to do their work - they go where the MOST folks gather, just like attacks on Windows occurs today...
I state this, because *NIX variant (BSD) MacOS X had the nerve to say things like "our OSX is unassailable by virus attacks" essentially on TV even basically, and the second their market share went up? So did attacks on MacOS X!
Do the math/use history as the example here: That OSX example alone recently proves my point on that account that *NIX's aren't "invulnerable to attack via viruses" (that, & Robert Morris' 1988 attack, the first worm/virus that was known to have raised hell & wreaked havoc on systems worldwide, UNIX systems no less, is another such example)... apk
100 percent of the world's spam is coming from a single network of computers: The Internet.
IMO, terror and spamming have extremely different profiles that make techniques designed for one pretty crappy against the other.
Spammers: much more numerous, and trying to reach as many people as possible as often as possible. Thus full of "paper trail" things, since there needs to be a connection back to pay money or there's no point. Motivated by money in general, which increases their numbers even if you crack down. Naturally decentralized. Full of bots and hacks and adware infections.
Terror: small numbers, specifically trying only to reach each other (even when trying to recruit, it's still a much smaller pool than spam targets). Very little paper trail transactions (just funding between established cels). Relatively centralized (compared to spam, anyway); it's less central than a national standing army, but there are still leaders to find through tracking underlings, and then if you get a leader you can get his underlings and maybe his own leader, and so on. Not really focused on hacking systems (that tends to fall under national-level undercover cyberwarfare; terror groups generally aren't doing that, they're just using the net for communication).
SPAM - I'll give you fucking spam - BLAM! BLAM! - No more spam.
.
Voting up, Voting down - If I really gave a fuck about your approval or not, I'd come and ask you.
For simplicity, go with a live CD, no hard drive, and plenty of RAM. Ubuntu does this. I've even seen a Windows Live CD run. The only pain here is boot-up. You can even setup everything caching to RAM (Puppy Linux does this but that distro has safety issues).
For bonus points, make the Ubuntu Live CD auto-login to the free 2GB of Ubuntu-One cloud storage to save Firefox bookmarks there, sticky notes, etc. Auto-login for the chat programs and Skype (installed & autostart).
FREE BUSINESS IDEA: Someone make a website that spits out a custom Ubuntu Live CD/DVD given a list of programs, auto-logins,ubuntu-one, integrated bookmark saving to the cloud, etc.
Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.