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	<title>Managed IT Services: Implimenting and Supporting IT Systems &#187; Botnet</title>
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		<title>Good Guys Bring Down the Mega-D Botnet</title>
		<link>http://percentotechblog.com/good-guys-bring-down-the-mega-d-botnet/</link>
		<comments>http://percentotechblog.com/good-guys-bring-down-the-mega-d-botnet/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Jan 2010 15:42:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bradley Schroeder</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Industry Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Percento]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Botnet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IT Security]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://percentotechblog.com/?p=665</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[For two years as a researcher with security company FireEye, Atif Mushtaq worked to keep Mega-D bot malware from infecting clients&#8217; networks. In the process, he learned how its controllers operated it. Last June, he began publishing his findings online. In November, he suddenly switched from de­­fense to offense. And Mega-D&#8211;a powerful, resilient botnet that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For two years as a researcher with security company FireEye, Atif Mushtaq worked to keep Mega-D bot malware from infecting clients&#8217; networks. In the process, he learned how its controllers operated it. Last June, he began publishing his findings online. In November, he suddenly switched from de­­fense to offense. And Mega-D&#8211;a powerful, resilient botnet that had forced 250,000 PCs to do its bidding&#8211;went down.</p>
<p><strong>Targeting Controllers</strong></p>
<p>Mushtaq and two FireEye colleagues went after Mega-D&#8217;s command infrastructure. A botnet&#8217;s first wave of attack uses e-mail attachments, Web-based offensives, and other distribution methods to infect huge numbers of PCs with malicious bot programs.</p>
<p>The bots receive marching orders from online command and control (C&amp;C) servers, but those servers are the botnet&#8217;s Achilles&#8217; heel: Isolate them, and the undirected bots will sit idle. Mega-D&#8217;s controllers used a far-flung array of C&amp;C servers, however, and every bot in its army had been assigned a list of additional destinations to try if it couldn&#8217;t reach its primary command server. So taking down Mega-D would require a carefully coordinated attack.</p>
<p><strong>Synchronized Assault</strong></p>
<p>Mushtaq&#8217;s team first contacted Internet service providers that unwittingly hosted Mega-D control servers; his research showed that most of the servers were based in the United States, with one in Turkey and another in Israel.</p>
<p>The FireEye group received positive responses except from the overseas ISPs. The domestic C&amp;C servers went down.</p>
<p>Next, Mushtaq and company contacted domain-name registrars holding records for the domain names that Mega-D used for its control servers. The registrars collaborated with FireEye to point Mega-D&#8217;s existing domain names to no­­where. By cutting off the botnet&#8217;s pool of domain names, the antibotnet operatives ensured that bots could not reach Mega-D-affiliated servers that the overseas ISPs had declined to take down.</p>
<p>Finally, FireEye and the registrars worked to claim spare domain names that Mega-D&#8217;s controllers listed in the bots&#8217; programming. The controllers intended to register and use one or more of the spare do­­mains if the existing domains went down&#8211;so FireEye picked them up and pointed them to &#8220;sinkholes&#8221; (servers it had set up to sit quietly and log efforts by Mega-D bots to check in for orders). Using those logs, FireEye estimated that the botnet consisted of about 250,000 Mega-D-infected computers.<br />
Down Goes Mega-D</p>
<p>MessageLabs, a Symantec e-mail security subsidiary, reports that Mega-D had &#8220;consistently been in the top 10 spam bots&#8221; for the previous year (find.pcworld.com/64165). The botnet&#8217;s output fluctuated from day to day, but on November 1 Mega-D accounted for 11.8 percent of all spam that MessageLabs saw.<br />
Three days later, FireEye&#8217;s action had reduced Mega-D&#8217;s market share of Internet spam to less than 0.1 percent, MessageLabs says.</p>
<p>FireEye plans to hand off the anti-Mega-D effort to ShadowServer.org, a volunteer group that will track the IP addresses of infected machines and contact affected ISPs and businesses. Business network or ISP administrators can register for the free notification service.<br />
Continuing the Battle</p>
<p>Mushtaq recognizes that FireEye&#8217;s successful offensive against Mega-D was just one battle in the war on malware. The criminals behind Mega-D may try to revive their botnet, he says, or they may abandon it and create a new one. But other botnets continue to thrive.</p>
<p>&#8220;FireEye did have a major victory,&#8221; says Joe Stewart, director of malware research with SecureWorks. &#8220;The question is, will it have a long-term impact?&#8221;</p>
<p>Like FireEye, Stewart&#8217;s security company protects client networks from botnets and other threats; and like Mushtaq, Stewart has spent years combating criminal enterprises. In 2009, Stewart outlined a proposal to create volunteer groups dedicated to making botnets unprofitable to run. But few security professionals could commit to such a time-consuming volunteer activity.</p>
<p>&#8220;It takes time and resources and money to do this day after day,&#8221; Stewart says. Other, under-the-radar strikes at various botnets and criminal organizations have occurred, he says, but these laudable efforts are &#8220;not going to stop the business model of the spammer.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mushtaq, Stewart, and other security pros agree that federal law enforcement needs to step in with full-time coordination efforts. According to Stewart, regulators haven&#8217;t begun drawing up serious plans to make that happen, but Mushtaq says that FireEye is sharing its method with domestic and international law enforcement, and he&#8217;s hopeful.</p>
<p>Until that happens, &#8220;we&#8217;re definitely looking to do this again,&#8221; Mushtaq says. &#8220;We want to show the bad guys that we&#8217;re not sleeping.&#8221;<strong></strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.pcworld.com/article/185122/good_guys_bring_down_the_megad_botnet.html"> Source </a></p>
<p></strong></p>
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