11/13/12

CYber Investigation over General Patraeus

CYber Investigation over General Patraeus

gAtO rEaD – NO CRIME committed- that the investigation for the top CIA general was because someone sent an eMail that said” I saw you touching the Generals leg at Dinner -Stop It” Yeah so one lady said to another lady – STOP MESSING WITH MY MAN – Pow – ZAP they get a court order to go thru someones eMail.

So if we take this premise that Judges will sign -COURT ORDERS to search your emails and any other emails that link it because of a jealous lover. It looks to gAtO that they have to much POWER – or the FBI is gonna search everyones emails now – legally. Court Ordered

This should send shock waves thru our industry – everyone is now warned that anyone’s email can be open to LE anytime and just about for any reason. I trusted the system, I trusted the Judges but lack of a crime should of not happened. There was NO CRIME committed the investigation turned out. But it has now taken down the reputation of 2 generals. NO CRIME

Now these are 2 famous generals what chance do mere mortals have that our eMails are going to be court order to investigate why simply because they can now. This shows to me the lack of justice or the erosion of justice that is coming down the cyber pipelines. If this is now a wake up call for security professionals to wake up and smell the coffee. Your email will be next unless we support less government control of our digital rights.

Freedom of Speech in cyberspace is a right not a privilege -gAtO oUt

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18563_162-57548694/fbi-role-in-petraeus-investigation-questioned/

mEoW

11/7/12

FEMA Cyber alert for Storm

gATO got- this email from FEMA after the election that’s pretty cool for government – gATO is the first to bItCh and mEoW about Governments – but Good Job Cyber FEMA….- gAtO OuT

Community Preparedness e-Brief

Follow us on Twitter for preparedness tips and announcements!

Nor’easter Impacting Areas Still Recovering from Hurricane Sandy – Ensure You Are Prepared

A Nor’easter is approaching the northeast today, including those areas still recovering from Hurricane Sandy. This Nor’easter is expected to bring strong winds, rain and even snow throughout today into Thursday. As the storm makes its way up the coast, we are asking you to do the following:

  1. Read and share this email;
  2. Visit http://www.ready.gov/winter-weather;
  3. Like and share FEMA’s Facebook page posts;
  4. Follow and retweet @ReadyDotGov tweets; and
  5. Download and share these useful apps: FEMA – Android, Apple, Blackberry

Given the power has not yet been fully restored in some areas, state and local governments are opening warming stations in anticipation of the Nor’easter. To find more about these warming stations and other open shelters, visit:

New York State

www.dhses.ny.gov/oem/

www.nyc.gov/html/misc/html/2012/warming_ctr.html

 

New Jersey

www.nj.gov/nj/home/features/spotlight/hurricane_sandy.shtml

www.nj211.org/hurricane.cfm

 

Connecticut

www.ct.gov/sandy

For those within an area expected to be impacted by this current storm, below are some simple steps one should take now to prepare:

  • Follow the direction of local officials – if told to evacuate, listen to the direction of your local officials and evacuate immediately.
  • Know the forecast for your area – listen to your NOAA weather radio and local news reports, or visit weather.gov for conditions in your area.
  • Check on your neighbor – make sure they are also prepared for the weather.
  • Have an adequate communication planbe sure friends and family know how to contact you. Text messages can often get around network disruptions when a phone call might not get through.

FEMA continues to support both recovery operations as a result of Hurricane Sandy as well as preparedness efforts associated with the Nor’easter. Additional commodities including food, water, blankets, and generators are currently being delivered to distribution points across the region impacted by Sandy. FEMA is also pre-positioning even more resources and supplies for its state and local partners to respond, if necessary, to the Nor’easter.

Community Relations Teams are on the ground, going door-to-door, letting individuals know how to register with FEMA for financial assistance and how to prepare for the upcoming storm.  More than 277,000 people have applied for financial assistance, and more than $250 million in assistance has been approved.

Prepare for hazards in YOUR area

Although you may not be in the path of this forecasted storm, now is a good time to review the potential hazards where you live. Knowing likely risks for your area, whether snow storms, earthquakes or tornadoes and knowing what to do when a disaster strikes is a critical part of being prepared and may make all the difference when seconds matter.

Local emergency management offices can help you identify hazards in your community and can outline the local plans and recommendations for each. Be sure to share this information with family, neighbors, colleagues and friends – talking about preparedness helps everyone be ready, “just in case.” Use the links below to make your family, business and community safer, more resilient and better prepared for any disaster event.

For further information regarding these safety tips or other post hurricane safety recommendations, visit www.fema.gov or www.ready.gov.

We want to hear your suggestions on how we can improve our communications to you, be sure to email us at citizencorps@dhs.gov.

 

11/6/12

Dutch government to give law enforcement authorities the power to hack into computers. This also means hidden servers on tor

gAtO ThInK - It’s time to fight back and tighten the security!

The Dutch government wants to give law enforcement authorities the power to hack into computers, including those located in other countries, for the purpose of discovering and gathering evidence during cybercrime investigations.

The Dutch government wants to give law enforcement authorities the power to hack into computers, including those located in other countries, for the purpose of discovering and gathering evidence during cybercrime investigations.

In a letter that was sent to the lower house of the Dutch parliament on Monday, the Dutch Minister of Security and Justice Ivo Opstelten outlined the government’s plan to draft a bill in upcoming months that would provide law enforcement authorities with new investigative powers on the Internet.

According to the letter, the new legislation would allow cybercrime investigators to remotely infiltrate computers in order to install monitoring software or to search them for evidence. Investigators would also be allowed to destroy illegal content, like child pornography, found during such searches.

These investigative powers would not only cover computers located in the Netherlands, but also computers located in other countries, if the location of those computers cannot be determined.

However, if the investigators can establish that a computer of interest is located in a foreign country, they will have to ask for assistance from the authorities in that country.

In his proposal, Opstelten used a case in which investigators from the Dutch National Police infiltrated “hidden” Tor websites that hosted child pornography, as an example of a situation in which the geographical location of the computers couldn’t be determined.

The Tor network allows its users to set up so-called “hidden services” that are only accessible from within the network using special addresses. When accessing such a service, a user’s connection is routed through several random Tor nodes, which prevents him from determining the real Internet Protocol (IP) address of the server hosting the service.

The Dutch police investigation referenced by Opstelten in his letter took place in August 2011 and two of the infiltrated Tor websites were hosted on servers located in the U.S.

The new legislation will provide strict safeguards for the proposed investigative powers, Opstelten said. Law enforcement authorities will only be able to exercise such powers when investigating offenses that carry a maximum prison sentence of four years or more and only after obtaining authorization from a judge, he said. Furthermore, all such actions will be automatically logged and the logs will be accessible for later review.

Cybercrime is a serious problem that needs to be tackled, but the proposed measures are not the right ones and they pose a serious risk to cybersecurity, Ot van Daalen, the director of Dutch digital rights organization Bits of Freedom, said Friday.

First of all, allowing police investigators to hack computers in other countries might encourage other governments to introduce similar legislation, but not necessarily with the same limitations, van Daalen said. “This could escalate into a digital arms race.”

The proposed legislation would create an incentive for governments to keep software vulnerabilities secret because they would need to exploit those vulnerabilities to attack systems used by cybercriminals, van Daalen said.

There are already security companies and independent researchers that sell zero-day exploits — exploits for unpatched vulnerabilities — to governments instead of reporting the vulnerabilities to vendors. In addition, some governments have openly admitted to developing military cyberoffensive capabilities.

Van Daalen believes that expanding the potential use of such exploits by law enforcement agencies will help the zero-day exploit market grow, which in turn will result in fewer vulnerabilities being reported and patched.

Governments could also pressure vendors to delay fixing vulnerabilities, van Daalen said. An example of this was when the Dutch government convinced Microsoft to delay the blacklisting of the DigiNotar digital certificates on Windows computers in the Netherlands for a few days in order to allow the government to take measures, despite the fact that the issue represented a security risk for all Windows users in the country, he said.

“There’s no doubt that there’s already a growing (and disquieting) market in the for-fee disclosure and exploitation of vulnerabilities, and this proposal could certainly further legitimize it: the possible advantages in terms of action against criminals (leaving aside ethical objections) have to be balanced against the likely, deleterious effects on the community of Internet users as a whole,” said David Harley, a senior research fellow at antivirus vendor ESET, via email on Friday.

Harley agrees with van Daalen that the proposed legislation could have a global impact. “It’s not possible to guarantee that the effects of these measures will be restricted to criminal elements: if the proposal succeeds in its present form, collateral damage in terms of the application of monitoring and attack technologies could be worldwide,” he said.

“Is it really feasible to take this approach effectively without breaching the sovereignty of other states? Even if agreement could be reached with other states on international legislation, does this proposal take into account the quid pro quo of giving foreign agencies such sweeping rights of access to the systems of its own citizens?,” Harley asked. “It seems to me that there’s a parallel here with the fact that many in the U.S. seem quite happy with alleged cyberespionage and sabotage against Iran yet show surprise and discontent that those claims have been used as justification for similar action by other nations.” - gATO OuT

 

10/25/12

The deep Dark Web -Book Release

gATO hApPy

AVAILABLE @ AMAZON - http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009VN40DU

AVAILABLE @SmashWords website  @http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/247146

I learned that I hate WORD: – but it’s the general format for publishing  - text boxes- get imbedded and you can’t format to EPUB or .mobi or anything – solution after going lOcO gAtO - was copy and paste into txt editor – save as RTF then copy paste back into a new WORD document and then reformat everything from scratch – and copy over the pictures – as you can tell I had fun-..-ugh mEoW F-F-F-F as much fun as a hairball but if it get’s the message out “FREEDOM OF SPEECH IN CYBERSPACE” then we done our job, anyway I hope you read it - Thank you Pierluigi a best friend a security gAtO ever had - gATO oUt

This Book covers the main aspects of the fabulous and dangerous world of -“The Deep Dark Web” . We are just two cyber specialists Pierluigi Paganini & Richard -gAtO- Amores, with one passion and two souls we wanted to explain the inner working of the deep dark web. We have had a long collaboration in this efforts to document our findings we made infiltrations into the dark places inaccessible to many to give a you the reader a clear vision on the major mystery of the dark hidden web that exist today in the Tor Onion network..

The Web, the Internet, mobile cell devices and social networking has become commonly used words that identify technological components of daily Internet user’s experience in the cyberspace. But how much do we really know about cyberspace? Very, very little, Google / Yahoo / Bing only show us 20% of the Internet the other 80% is hidden to the average user unless you know were to look.

The other 80% of the Internet is what this book is about the “Deep Dark Web”, three words with millions of interpretations, mysterious place on the web, the representation of the hell in the cyberspace but also the last opportunity to preserve freedom of expression from censorship. Authorities and corporation try to discourage the use of this untapped space because they don’t control it. We the people of the free world control this network of Tor -Onion Routers by volunteer around the world.

The Deep Dark Web seems to be full of crooks and cyber criminals, it is the hacker’s paradise, where there are no rule, no law, no identity in what is considered the reign of anonymity, but this is also the reason why many persecuted find refuge and have the opportunity to shout to the world their inconvenient truths.

The Deep Dark Web is a crowded space with no references but in reality it is a mine of information unimaginable, a labyrinth of knowledge in the book we will try to take you by the hand to avoid the traps and pitfalls hopefully illuminating your path in the dark.

Cybercrime, hacktivism, intelligence, cyber warfare are all pieces of this complex puzzle in which we will try to make order, don’t forget that the Deep Dark Web has unbelievable opportunity for business and governments, it represents the largest on-line market where it is possible to sell and acquire everything, and dear reader where there is $money$  you will find also banking, financial speculators and many other sharks.

Do you believe that making  money in Deep Web is just a criminal prerogative? Wrong, the authors show you how things works in the hidden economy and which are the future perspectives of is digital currency, the Bitcoin.

This manuscript proposes both faces of the subject, it illustrates the risks but also legitimate use of anonymizing networks such as TOR adopted by journalist to send file reports before governments agents censored his work .

Here are some question we may answers to:

How many person know about the cyber criminals and their ecosystem in the deep web? 

How many have provided information on the financial systems behind the “dirty affairs”? 

How the law enforcement and governments use Dark Web?

Let’s hold your breath and start the trip in the abyss of knowledge to find answers to the above questions. We hope that with this book you can learn something new about – The Deep Dark Web.

10/18/12

Tor hidden service secrets

Tor hidden service secrets

gAtO fRiDaY 10-18-2012 update hay you want to see a secret -hidden service -

Creative Hack – http://2kcreatydoneqybu.onion 

on top of this the name is custom – so that took extra time and efforts and the site is real when you have thier secret token — https://ahmia.fi/pagescreenshots/2kcreatydoneqybu.png

here you can take a look at this site anyway – try to extract any information from this secret Tor Website – you can’t see any source code – so you can’t make it error to extract information. I ask a friend that’s a Penn Tester to check this out – If anyone can extract any information please let me know –gAtOoUt

gAtO fRiDaY - sound off! - As i play with my new Tor hidden service – “Ok just apache website running https: a static site -right now” – What we know is that a Tor hidden service stays hidden until you send someone your .onion URL (example:- otwxbdvje5ttplpv.onion ) now once you know the URL your have access to the site. You may have to log in like on most bb sites but at least you reached the hidden service and now you can do stuff. 

While looking at the torrc file setting I found a little secret that with (server side) HiddenServiceAuthorizeClient-tag and the HidServAuth-tag on the (client) side -// your hidden service is now INVISIBLE to only the people that have a secret key installed in their “torrc” client file. In plain talk -

1. I put a special key on my hidden server – torrc file – HiddenServiceAuthorizeClient
2. generate a new key for client side – “what_ever_bcuuw46b3heyy”
3. send keys to the secret agents that can see or access the site HidServAuth
4. Only the people with my KEY can get to the front door of my hidden service – torrc file HidServAuth

This makes it hard to find the hidden service even if you have the URL ///./. it does nothing, no source code like a normal website. I ran into a few of these and had no clue why these sites behaved the way they did. I can pick apart most websites, at least, basics like html, asp, js, java directory you can gleam all kinds of information. But if you hit one of these site in Tor well it a big 0 -zero -///.

With my TDS project (Tor Directory Scan) I am generating an onion URL A-Za-z 2-7 URL and going out to scrape it and get some basic information about the site with a basic web crawler that grabs METADATA and not just links to other pages. If I hit these sites with my basic program I’ll get a dud -zero -///- but I will have a hit of sort. I hope to catch some of these sites – we all know the rcp command works well in Tor sometimes I found and httrack is another tool for sucking up site // be they hidden service or not – these secret hidden services will be very interesting in the scan -gATO oUt

— Tor Syntax

HiddenServiceAuthorizeClient auth-type client-name,client-name,…
If configured, the hidden service is accessible for authorized clients only. The auth-type can either be ‘basic’ for a general-purpose authorization protocol or ‘stealth’ for a less scalable protocol that also hides service activity from unauthorized clients. Only clients that are listed here are authorized to access the hidden service. Valid client names are 1 to 19 characters long and only use characters in A-Za-z0-9+-_ (no spaces). If this option is set, the hidden service is not accessible for clients without authorization any more. Generated authorization data can be found in the hostname file. Clients need to put this authorization data in their configuration file using HidServAuth.


HidServAuth onion-address auth-cookie [service-name]
Client authorization for a hidden service. Valid onion addresses contain 16 characters in a-z2-7 plus “.onion”, and valid auth cookies contain 22 characters in A-Za-z0-9+/. The service name is only used for internal purposes, e.g., for Tor controllers. This option may be used multiple times for different hidden services. If a hidden service uses authorization and this option is not set, the hidden service is not accessible. Hidden services can be configured to require authorization using the HiddenServiceAuthorizeClient option

10/1/12

USCyberLabs has a hidden service Tor otwxbdvje5ttplpv.onion

gAtO wAnTeD – to get our USCyberLabs Tor .onion network -hidden service- up and running and after thinking of other future projects we decided to make our Ubuntu -BackTrack 5 machine be our Tor Server running apache2 hidden service  . My BT5 machine is running – Gnone v.2.30.2 Ubuntu build 06/25/2010 ?

Apache/2.2.14 (Ubuntu) Server at otwxbdvje5ttplpv.onion Port 80

1. First problem BT5 is designed to run as root and Tor is not so first thing is to generate a new user:

uscyberlabs - el gatoMalo

gAtO new hidden service otwxbdvje5ttplpv.onion

# adduser gato

# password gato-password

For help go to man adduser for more information

I open up terminal for everything so as SU -(SuperUser)

nano /etc/apache2/apache2.conf > file

nano /etc/apache2/ports.conf > file

nano /lib/tor/torrc -> file

nano /etc/host -> file

2. Before we change users and start to work as gato let’s set up the apache2 service

# apt-get install apache2

whizz, bang ,- wow and it’s installed next we need to modify some configuration files.

The Apache install will install /var/www/index.html <— so modify this file for your web site:

The Apache install will install /etc/apache2 and in it you will find a bunch of the configuration files:

apache2.conf and ports.conf these two files will have to be modified and Tor torrc file.

This is a great guide — from ioerror  —but don’t try the wiki – - https://github.com/ioerror/hs-wiki/tree/master/configs another guide not so good but it helped —http://www.martini.nu/blog/2010/06/tor-vbox.html    —

ports-apache2.conf 

12 NameVirtualHost 127.0.0.1:8080Listen 127.0.0.1:8080

torrc

123

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

# some information may be for future projects -# This is a very minimal Tor configuration file to be placed in# /etc/tor/torrc unless you know better.

#

# This configuration file should be used with a wiki Hidden Service on

# 127.0.0.1:8080

#

 

Log notice file /var/log/tor/wiki.log

DataDirectory /var/lib/tor

 

HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/hidden_service/

HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:8080

Add your hidden Service Tor url to your host file – trust me this really helped during trouble shooting

I added my Hidden service onion ID to the

nano /etc/host -> file

127.0.0.1 otwxbdvje5ttplpv.onion 

I generated a few more hidden service keys to deploy some other sites later -Open up 2 more terminal windows – I can start stuff in background mode but during testing everything has it’s own terminal just in case.

To install Tor on unbuntu linux — https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-doc-unix.html.en  —

To start Tor

./start-tor-browser

To start Apache web server

sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 start

I’m not going to give you my directory structure but just a heads up :

DataDirectory  /var/lib/tor/

HiddenServiceDir /var/www/web_hidden_service

HiddenServicePort 80:127.0.0.1:8080

Since I’m testing I log to my terminal but a log error file will work better

Log notice stdout

So ok now comes the test – I have a static html website – a hidden service in the Tor .onion network. I did not go to icann for an domain name and pay them- I don’t have to pay InMotion for hosting service – just my cox-internet connection and a spare machine and I have a website in the dark web – This machine will host other websites – hidden services like wordpress, a bb bulletin board- or maybe some other web service – It will host my BotNet for the Tor Directory Project – Oh yeah I want to build a few bot’s for GOOD and map out the Tor Directory and make each Bot an OR (onion Router) so it helps the cause and gives back a bit. I plan to also run OnionOO – Arm – Atlas – mOnionO Compass and Weather.

SO if your out an about in Tor Land come on by and kick the tires and peek and poke my Tor hidden service website – otwxbdvje5ttplpv.onion  if you find any openings let me know.pls As I add new features I will tell you about them -gAtO oUt 

09/23/12

Free Bot-Nets Anyone

gAtO wAs - looking for code for bot’s to see how they work and I want to tell you it’s been kinda easy to find lots of bots…bots, code and DIY kits./ OK [1] below is the list of the Bots I found downloaded and playing with them to see how they work. Another part of this problem is it’s not just code and DIY kits, but code_mixer is a library that allows you to generate new Virus, undetectable to AV software. I also found different versions of Bots and different type of networks, IRC bots, http_bots, p2p_bots and on top of all this I found all kinds of discussions about how to make them ToR enable which has been going on for a while. Hiding a sophisticated c&c Bot-Master server in ToR ONION NETWORK IS EASY.

gAtOs –/ bot-net collection /–

I also wanted to know if these bot’s and code was not just old code stuff- well some is old by Internet years 2009 – that’s a long time in cyber pirate years but polymorphing code works no matter when it was created and it hides virus and worms really easy from AV systems especially if it’s a new version of the bots . Another thing I wanted to find is STUXNET, DUQU, FLAME SkyWriter and other famous Bots. Well I found samples of these — not just one but hundreds of version of these bot’s- and it was easy I included a list of some of the more newer bot codes.[2]…//

Oh I forgot ToR and Bots including  STUXNET, DUQU, FLAME SkyWriter and others do run in Tor onion network just check out the – insert date – First seen – Last seen – dates on this list . you may also check out —https://zeustracker.abuse.ch/statistic.php  — I found that my builder version showed that I had found Zeus 2.0.8.9 and is the number one version of zeus bot-net.  

One easy bot design is to use Tor2Web as a way to access a c&c server in Tor without running Tor on the infected client. The Tor network is getting more popular and people see that they can’t be caught in Tor so they are building lot’s of new Bots that run all over Tor – p2p and http and they are starting also new places like i2p networks and running bots—/   -gAtO oUt

[1] the list of Bots and code 

  1. _blackShades_4.8 Net -
  2. Black Pro _LostDoor v5.1
  3. BlackShade 4.8
  4. Blackshades NET v4.2
  5. Blackshades NET v3.8.1
  6. Blackshades_Archive
  7. Botnet Packet
  8. dark_Comet_1342319517
  9. ebookskayla-1
  10. G-Bot_1.7
  11. INCREDULiTY – ClientMesh
  12. ISR Stealer 0.4
  13. KnollKeylogger-1
  14. LostDoor Black Pro v5.1
  15. open source Exploit Pack
  16. optima10_ddos
  17. ProRat_v1.9 SE
  18. Spy-Net v2.7 Final
  19. SpyEye 1.3.45 Loader
  20. spyeye_tutorial
  21. Stuxnet_Laurelai-decompile-dump-2e11313
  22. Ultimate_Spy-Net v2.7 Final
  23. x_1ST-SECTION FILE INFECTOR, library+example,
  24. x_007
  25. x_arclib
  26. x_avp_troj
  27. x_code_mixer
  28. x_dscript
  29. x_eicar
  30. x_http ASM
  31. x_infecting *.HLP files (example/description)
  32. x_m1
  33. x_mistfall
  34. x_Mistfall.ZOMBIE-z10d
  35. x_pgpmorf1
  36. x_pgpmorf2
  37. x_tp_com
  38. x_zhello
  39. ZeuS 2.0.8-1.9
  40. Zeus collection
  41. ZBOT
  42. zeus 1.2.7.19
  43. ZeuS 2.0.8.9 – experimental
  44. Zeus Analysis Website

—[2] STUXNET, DUQU, FLAME SkyWriter and a few more bots in the wild check out the last seen date…

 

 

 

 

 

 

Flamer Bots  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

 

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
d73fe5f9f8dc2fc68aea57ba5c0353f4 2012-07-16 2012-06-07 09:11:15 2012-06-19 20:28:53 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- N [Trj] Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Trojan:Win32/Fl ame.A!cert
06a84ad28bbc9365eb9e08c697555154 2012-06-26 2012-06-05 11:24:36 2012-06-08 12:08:30 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- K [Trj] Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!D Armadillo v1.71
0a17040c18a6646d485bde9ce899789f 2012-06-20 2012-05-30 12:45:05 2012-06-29 21:10:27 a variant of Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- H [Trj] HEUR:Worm.Win32 .Flame.gen Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!A
581f2ef2e3ba164281b562e435882eb5 2012-06-20 2012-06-01 06:09:15 2012-06-08 21:49:22 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- E [Trj] Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!A
5a002eb0491ff2b5f275a73f43edf19e 2012-06-20 2012-06-01 08:13:39 2012-06-29 21:15:07 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- E [Trj] Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!A
7551635b101b63b215512b00d60e00f3 2012-06-20 2006-07-18 04:31:57 2012-06-20 04:19:30 probably a variant of Win32/Agent.IGOUUZX Win32:Trojan-ge n Backdoor.Win32. Bifrose.cgfb Trojan.DialUpPa sswordMailer.A Trojan:Win32/Du twiper Aspack ASPack v1.08.03
75de82289ac8c816e27f3215a4613698 2012-06-20 2012-06-01 06:17:01 2012-06-21 06:36:16 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- L [Trj] Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!A
8ed3846d189c51c6a0d69bdc4e66c1a5 2012-06-20 2010-10-05 03:56:52 2012-06-21 06:21:20 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Malware-g en Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!A
bddbc6974eb8279613b833804eda12f9 2012-06-20 2012-06-01 03:37:00 2012-06-21 06:23:32 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- K [Trj] Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!D Armadillo v1.71
c09306141c326ce96d39532c9388d764 2012-06-20 2012-06-01 08:09:24 2012-06-21 06:43:33 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- L [Trj] Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!A
cc54006c114d51ec47c173baea51213d 2012-06-20 2012-06-01 08:13:46 2012-06-01 10:05:08 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- E [Trj] Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!C
e5a49547191e16b0a69f633e16b96560 2012-06-20 2012-05-30 14:22:32 2012-06-28 00:41:49 a variant of Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- H [Trj] HEUR:Worm.Win32 .Flame.gen Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!A
f0a654f7c485ae195ccf81a72fe083a2 2012-06-20 2012-05-28 14:37:54 2012-06-24 11:31:16 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- A [Trj] Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!B
cb5 2012-06-19 2010-07-20 13:41:34 2012-06-24 11:30:50 Win32/Flamer.A Win32:Skywiper- I [Trj] Worm.Win32.Flam e.a Trojan.Flame.A Worm:Win32/Flam e.gen!A
0464e1fabcf2ef8b24d6fb63b19f1064 2012-06-18 2012-06-11 08:06:23 2012-06-11 08:06:23 Win32:Skywiper- A [Trj]
09d6740fd9be06cbb5182d02a851807d 2012-06-18 2012-06-11 08:14:24 2012-06-11 08:14:24 Win32:Skywiper- C [Trj]
780c5bc598054a365a75d10ac05a3157 2012-06-18 2012-06-11 07:50:56 2012-06-11 07:50:56 Win32:Skywiper- D [Trj]
cb98cca16865aa2330d2cf93fd6886ff 2012-06-18 2012-06-11 07:41:19 2012-06-11 07:41:19 Win32:Skywiper- E [Trj]
fac96cf0f5a43980635f6a6017a5edb0 2012-06-18 2012-08-04 06:42:23 2012-08-04 06:42:23 Win32:Skywiper- F [Trj]
bb4bf0681a582245bd379e4ace30274b 2012-06-16 2012-05-28 14:37:53 2012-07-25 19:03:03 Win32:Skywiper- D [Trj] Trojan.Generic. KDV.641104
Checked on VT at 2012-07-25 02:22:38

—DUQU Bot  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
2f5a23b67e6928d58df136fb3431c1a2 2012-08-27 2012-06-27 09:06:34 2012-06-27 09:06:34 Win32/Packed.ASProtect.CEC Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Trojan.Win32.Ge nome.fxan Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Armadillo v1.xx – v2.xx
362b306967fa08fa204e968613c48b54 2012-08-27 2012-06-25 19:17:57 2012-06-25 19:17:57 a variant of Win32/PcClient.NDO Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Trojan.Win32.Ge nome.cfwz Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient Themida Xtreme-Protecto r v1.05
5a8b8b55e7d12bcaee50af462d70e4f1 2012-08-27 2012-03-23 03:56:59 2012-03-24 06:50:48 a variant of Win32/TrojanDropper.Delf.NXY Win32:Duqu-I [Rtk] Trojan-Dropper. Win32.Agent.wzj Trojan.Generic. 2087186 Backdoor:Win32/ Delf.RAN
71c91c34ef08b0222a7385a9fc91a156 2012-08-27 2010-01-07 16:30:15 2012-08-01 21:30:31 Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Trojan.Win32.Ge nome.ptdr Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 NSPack NsPacK V3.7 -> LiuXingPing
78efa3d89fa835c2d841ca021ba04f9a 2012-08-27 2012-06-20 16:29:55 2012-06-20 16:29:55 Win32/PcClient Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. PcClient.akqr Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient NSPack
7e995e30b3c752d55708ba70b64c576d 2012-08-27 2012-07-01 03:18:29 2012-07-01 03:18:29 a variant of Win32/PcClient.NEK Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. PcClient.eld Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient Malware_Prot.AJ
8fb8994eb25f35d1e4f62ab00871170b 2012-08-27 2011-11-30 06:35:32 2011-11-30 06:35:32 Win32/PcClient.NCD Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. PcClient.eld Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient Malware_Prot.AJ
90fc2ddf9985d14d4252b016018852af 2012-08-27 2012-06-27 06:46:46 2012-06-27 06:46:46 a variant of Win32/PcClient Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. PcClient.dire Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient
9a9e77d2b7792fbbddcd7ce05a4eb26e 2012-08-27 2011-11-02 03:07:36 2011-11-02 03:16:28 Win32/Duqu.A Win32:Malware-g en Trojan.Win32.In ject.bjyg Trojan.Generic. 6658401 Trojan:Win32/Hi deproc.G UPX_LZMA
9d00bebb4be61eb425ef8adfa05968fd 2012-08-27 2012-05-23 12:23:42 2012-05-27 21:59:18 a variant of Win32/PcClient.NBG Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. PcClient.hnp Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient ASPack v2.12
9dc323e0595caf5e5152b6353c6c7b58 2012-08-27 2012-07-01 09:01:29 2012-07-01 09:01:29 a variant of Win32/PcClient.NEK Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. PcClient.eld Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient Malware_Prot.AJ
b25cc61de1a0d2086356d7757b26e2ef 2012-08-27 2012-06-23 15:43:36 2012-06-23 15:43:36 Win32/PcClient.NBI Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. Hupigon.bxjm Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ Hupigon.ZQ.dll Aspack ASPack v2.12
bb9c97fe54b85179f9a83ca4cfdd24f3 2012-08-27 2012-07-02 11:06:55 2012-07-02 11:06:55 a variant of Win32/PcClient.NEK Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. PcClient.eld Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient Malware_Prot.AJ
ca7b6963a5b45b67e1bfa1a0f415eb24 2012-08-27 2012-06-29 01:20:37 2012-06-29 01:20:37 Win32/PcClient.NCD Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. PcClient.eld Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient Malware_Prot.AJ
5d8932237d14019ae81e97c5b8951ef8 2012-08-15 2012-08-18 11:59:04 2012-08-18 11:59:04 Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient NSPack
6416039108bd666f073d51db5328f6c9 2012-08-15 2012-08-18 14:07:59 2012-08-18 14:07:59 Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] HEUR:Backdoor.W in32.Generic Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient ASPack v2.12
774c19f455cff3a443e7f3a58983a12b 2012-08-15 2012-08-18 18:18:21 2012-08-18 18:18:21 Win32:Duqu-I [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. Hupigon2.ja Trojan.Generic. 826880 Backdoor:Win32/ Delf.RAN
b19fe4b53d01d2746eb83e9fddd1eb67 2012-08-15 2012-07-16 12:33:52 2012-07-16 12:33:52 Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] HEUR:Backdoor.W in32.Generic Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient ASPack v2.12
f41b0a33d2ca4ba05a95b1a9a40e7e28 2012-08-15 2012-08-19 15:09:26 2012-08-19 15:09:26 Win32:Duqu-L [Rtk] Backdoor.Win32. PcClient.agyu Backdoor.PCClie nt.1 Backdoor:Win32/ PcClient
2f4e30a497ae6183aabfe8ba23068c1b 2012-06-20 2012-06-11 17:02:50 2012-07-15 11:59:26 Win32/Stuxnet.A Win32:Malware-g en Worm.Win32.Stux net.v Win32.Worm.Stux net.E embedded  

 

 

 

 

the

 

—zeus  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

 

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
0a295bb2cbb44d9ba2e18bbfeb511d1d 2012-08-27 2011-02-24 10:59:09 2012-05-12 09:37:44 WinCE/Zbot.A Win32:Malware-g en Trojan-Spy.WinC E.Zitmo.a Backdoor.Bot.13 4855 Trojan:WinCE/Zi tmo.A
2b2dcecfd882efb2100ce28d09c89f75 2012-08-27 2009-01-30 05:49:27 2009-07-02 06:23:46 a variant of Win32/Spy.Zbot.JF Win32:Zbot-BCW Trojan.Spy.Zeus .C PWS:Win32/Zbot
33a6fef6d2487a95af539e532be424b2 2012-08-27 2011-09-03 03:28:17 2012-02-21 21:41:11 a variant of Win32/Zeus.B Win32:Malware-g en Backdoor.Win32. BotNet.ac Gen:Variant.Kaz y.8986 PWS:Win32/Zbot. TV UPX UPX 2.90 [LZMA] -> Markus Oberhumer, Laszlo Molnar & John Reiser
4153a07347b3bdf74b527e51cc63a843 2012-08-27 2010-05-16 15:01:27 2010-05-18 21:58:47 a variant of Win32/Spy.Agent.PZ Win32:Zbot-gen Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.myj Trojan.Spy.Zeus .1.Gen PWS:Win32/Zbot. gen!A
4fe9b3febda0dd9e8f89ed29b1a39560 2012-08-27 2012-03-27 07:25:01 2012-03-28 09:48:26 a variant of Win32/Spy.Agent.PZ Win32:Susn-G [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.roh Trojan.Spy.Zeus .1.Gen PWS:Win32/Zbot. GA
7b470095ce2887377e6f9e37fd0471dc 2012-08-27 2012-06-30 09:12:53 2012-06-30 09:12:53 a variant of Win32/Spy.Agent.PZ Win32:Zbot-gen [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.roh Trojan.Spy.Zeus .1.Gen PWS:Win32/Zbot. GA
831d2fdb9ad258f68ce5924b1feac10a 2012-08-27 2011-10-17 02:49:20 2012-04-30 22:09:54 a variant of Win32/Spy.Agent.PZ Win32:Susn-G [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.roh Trojan.Spy.Zeus .1.Gen PWS:Win32/Zbot. GA
9eb88298f93809ea7d733e29bb3d466b 2012-08-27 2007-11-16 20:51:16 2011-08-09 00:18:04 a variant of Win32/Spy.Agent.PZ Win32:Tibs-BND [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.adj Trojan.Spy.Zeus .2.Gen PWS:Win32/Zbot. gen!B
9faf0c526795ee01839ecb51074dd7ae 2012-08-27 2012-06-23 06:47:46 2012-06-23 06:47:46 a variant of Win32/Spy.Agent.PZ Win32:Tibs-BNF [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.adj Trojan.Spy.Zeus .2.Gen PWS:Win32/Zbot. gen!B
a05211df243da8a9e628b4767aafc989 2012-08-27 2007-11-17 13:55:10 2011-08-08 23:43:09 Win32/Spy.Agent.NDY Win32:Zbot-AG [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.po Trojan.Spy.Zeus .2.Gen PWS:Win32/Zbot. gen!B
aa874f7c37962240569ff35a030c2e71 2012-08-27 2012-06-26 08:59:57 2012-06-26 08:59:57 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.OV Win32:Zbot-FS [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.xw Trojan.Spy.Zeus .1.Gen PWS:Win32/Zbot. gen!B
b484264bca4286f65d5cb68efefa9dc4 2012-08-27 2008-08-22 19:29:43 2009-01-08 08:22:34 Trojan.Spy.Zeus .1.Gen TrojanSpy:Win32 /Zbot.gen!C
c38412218981ddc0cd93d5d98971a781 2012-08-27 2009-12-19 06:17:33 2009-12-31 15:13:34 a variant of Win32/Spy.Zbot.UN Win32:Zbot-BCW Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.aadb Trojan.Spy.Zeus .C PWS:Win32/Zbot. gen!R
c4905c4610b9c2992bc395429b7365ab 2012-08-27 2009-09-04 15:24:05 2009-09-04 15:24:05 Win32:Zbot-BCW Heur.Trojan.Gen eric Trojan.Spy.Zeus .C PWS:Win32/Zbot. gen!R
c70db2b312a23e11b5e671cac70db98f 2012-08-27 2008-02-19 12:29:14 2012-02-19 14:34:25 PS/MPC-Zeus-753 Virus.DOS.PS-MP C-based PS-MPC.0753.DN. Gen Virus:DOS/PSMPC .753
d16a1870603a0f7111c64584e6eb5deb 2012-08-27 2012-02-20 19:36:30 2012-03-02 01:50:10 Win32/PSW.Agent.NTM Win32:Zeus-A [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Ag ent2.fadw Gen:Variant.Zlo b.1 PWS:Win32/Farei t.gen!C
d1db75d0b93b0f1bda856242c8ab1264 2012-08-27 2009-10-15 20:31:08 2009-10-17 14:14:20 a variant of Win32/Spy.Zbot.UN Win32:Zbot-BCW Heur.Trojan.Gen eric Trojan.Spy.Zeus .C PWS:Win32/Zbot. QA
d5a75c535b33fc09f1ab6e181d59fc84 2012-08-27 2011-06-18 10:59:14 2011-12-09 01:49:01 a variant of Win32/Spy.Zbot.XO Win32:Zbot-ATL [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.roh Trojan.Spy.Zeus .1.Gen PWS:Win32/Zbot. C
e806cfe7d3257bf61f5b95215e3ec23e 2012-08-27 2012-06-23 03:56:28 2012-06-23 03:56:28 a variant of Win32/Spy.Agent.PZ Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.adj Trojan.Spy.Zeus .2.Gen PWS:Win32/Zbot. gen!B
078b7684cbc5cd14770fb2c842ece7e4 2012-08-15 2012-08-04 03:55:52 2012-08-09 17:09:00 Win32:Susn-G [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.roh

—gBot  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

 

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
0017c17069fcd00a8c13e2e1bb955494 2012-08-27 2011-11-16 12:17:45 2011-12-14 17:33:12 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.VNB Win32:Cybota [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Jo rik.Gbot.rtt Trojan.Generic. 6903230 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
0033496f9baa6c05dc709db64a7b8cef 2012-08-27 2011-11-19 12:30:08 2011-12-16 01:08:42 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.VZB Win32:Cybota [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Jo rik.Gbot.rwf Trojan.Generic. 6914846 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
00392a6a7919d425e512c4466984f8f3 2012-08-27 2011-10-05 04:29:14 2011-11-29 18:00:26 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.TEV Win32:Cybota [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Gbot.osk Gen:Variant.Kaz y.38517 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
004ed94e35b42f7b76fb4b729573a123 2012-08-27 2012-01-13 03:41:13 2012-02-11 12:53:50 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.YBH Win32:Cybota [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Gbot.qwk Gen:Variant.Kaz y.50582 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
00b66b966778139c0b83721c5e307695 2012-08-27 2011-11-24 01:24:42 2012-01-02 23:04:36 Win32/Cycbot.AF Win32:Cybota [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Jo rik.Gbot.qwn Gen:Heur.Kelios .1 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
00c789e5ae793c6be65482d4b472f0f0 2012-08-27 2011-11-18 16:42:21 2011-12-15 14:43:24 Win32/Cycbot.AK Win32:Cybota [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Jo rik.Gbot.rvk Backdoor.Bot.14 6893 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
00daf7e9577d84c5949439b02f11af74 2012-08-27 2011-03-23 02:31:51 2011-07-20 22:11:40 Win32/Cycbot.AF Win32:Cybota [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Gbot.aed Gen:Trojan.Heur .KS.1 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.B
00ddbd4723ec6394f278fd5d3275a952 2012-08-27 2012-02-02 18:46:53 2012-03-29 17:13:40 Win32/Cycbot.AK Win32:Cybota [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Gbot.qwt Gen:Variant.Kaz y.53272 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
00deb18fb207bc020a30ff7b7550f279 2012-08-27 2011-03-19 21:01:29 2011-07-12 08:53:49 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.LOJ Win32:Cybota [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Gbot.adk Gen:Trojan.Heur .KS.1 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.B
00e762e7fe180b096207c7b72f608cc3 2012-08-27 2012-06-20 11:30:59 2012-06-20 11:30:59 a variant of Win32/AGbot.V Win32:SdBot-FJH [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. SdBot.ozd Gen:Win32.IRC-B ackdoor.fmW@aih z9oj Backdoor:Win32/ Gaertob.A Armadillo v1.71
00f3359898621f36a5251759a3a89495 2012-08-27 2011-11-11 20:35:02 2011-11-16 04:05:08 Win32/Adware.WinAntiVirus.AD Win32:Gbot-M [Trj] Trojan-Download er.Win32.Fdvm.b Application.Gen eric.386031 Trojan:Win32/Si refef.P
00f83d49831dc202e04478f670b96d50 2012-08-27 2011-12-14 07:28:20 2011-12-14 07:28:20 Win32/Cycbot.AF Win32:Cybota [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Gbot.qmi Backdoor.Gbot.I Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
00fc1e69ca9031e5c47dfcde78dc0537 2012-08-27 2011-09-09 05:34:05 2012-02-11 20:04:14 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.RWA Win32:Cybota [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Jo rik.Gbot.iag Gen:Variant.Kaz y.34336 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
0117b98cb2114c51c4d51831820cc8e4 2012-08-27 2011-04-02 06:56:59 2011-07-21 00:22:16 Win32/Cycbot.AF Win32:Cybota [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Gbot.ahq Trojan.Generic. KD.163287 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.B
016d69d4cbd779b63bb6927fa9c19730 2012-08-27 2012-03-10 20:03:49 2012-04-30 20:29:18 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.SUP Win32:Cybota [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Gbot.oep Gen:Heur.Conjar .5 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
0189fd7b339df01d4a4be1113520ad46 2012-08-27 2010-02-19 22:20:06 2012-06-09 04:12:35 a variant of MSIL/TrojanDropper.Agent.JF Win32:Malware-g en Trojan-Dropper. MSIL.Agent.fws Trojan.Generic. 3812196 VirTool:Win32/O bfuscator.NC
01e118c11c4145710ff1801f34a44bc7 2012-08-27 2012-07-05 15:25:49 2012-07-05 15:25:49 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.ACYA Win32:MalOb-IF [Cryp] Backdoor.Win32. Gbot.wkt Gen:Variant.Bar ys.3481 TrojanDownloade r:Win32/Carberp .C
021817e91793fa15bee2937fe2befddd 2012-08-27 2011-12-06 03:55:36 2012-01-03 16:39:38 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.VCE Win32:Cybota [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Jo rik.Gbot.qxq Gen:Variant.Kaz y.42337 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G
0229d3256bd2309f1d581533febdc1e7 2012-08-27 2012-01-31 17:40:43 2012-02-21 13:59:28 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.UVF Win32:KadrBot [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Jo rik.ZAccess.no Gen:Variant.Kaz y.41897 Trojan:Win32/Si refef.J
0296357c2952eafb29b2edeaf776a787 2012-08-27 2011-09-13 21:55:14 2012-02-12 16:34:09 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.RLK Win32:Cybota [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Jo rik.Gbot.epv Gen:Variant.Kaz y.33354 Backdoor:Win32/ Cycbot.G

 

—spyeye  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

 

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
004df992aa00f6a83388aeb55cf806bb 2012-08-27 2012-03-17 18:33:21 2012-04-25 11:55:35 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.VMB Win32:MalOb-IV [Cryp] HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Gen:Variant.Kaz y.43891 Trojan:Win32/Dy namer!dtc
0050771f197d912b1fd2767c9b07b0d9 2012-08-27 2012-01-22 05:30:06 2012-01-22 05:30:06 Win32:MalOb-IJ [Cryp] HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Gen:Variant.Kaz y.46466
0055add5c7c8778b1e97e0bc2cdb34fd 2012-08-27 2011-04-05 09:52:34 2012-08-17 14:32:46 Win32:Karagany- E [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.SpyEyes.gaf Gen:Variant.Kaz y.154 TrojanDownloade r:Win32/Karagan y.A
00881bfd664c40bd17f00da4e2b1707e 2012-08-27 2012-01-30 20:45:05 2012-03-25 16:25:27 Win32/Ramnit.A Win32:Vitro HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Gen:Heur.FKP.1 Trojan:Win32/Ra mnit.A
009f01b994bd6211d8b79775decc5854 2012-08-27 2012-06-25 07:23:14 2012-06-25 07:23:14 Win32/Spy.SpyEye.CA Win32:Regrun-JI [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Me nti.kxpm Trojan.Generic. 6382824 Trojan:Win32/Ey eStye.N Armadillo v1.71
00bbce9dac6dec8f16547da20c09594c 2012-08-27 2011-11-11 04:55:40 2011-11-11 04:55:40 a variant of Win32/AutoRun.Injector.AM Win32:Spyeye-ZL [Trj] HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Worm.Generic.35 0922 Armadillo v1.71
00db3ed3ba79dcc6627b13f5c0557f46 2012-08-27 2012-06-25 13:26:56 2012-06-25 13:26:56 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.HJW Win32:Zbot-MVW [Trj] Trojan-Download er.Win32.Piker. cqy Gen:Variant.Kaz y.1690 TrojanDownloade r:Win32/Bredola b.AC
00ffd9a941c6fe8d57210bf82c674943 2012-08-27 2011-06-26 15:23:06 2011-07-19 07:46:49 Win32/Bamital.FA Win32:Trojan-ge n Trojan.Win32.Of icla.nbt Trojan.Generic. KD.225389 Trojan:Win32/Me redrop UPX 2.90 [LZMA] -> Markus Oberhumer, Laszlo Molnar & John Reiser
012cca77918ab828662e9b726c97319c 2012-08-27 2011-11-03 13:55:46 2012-01-28 16:05:29 a variant of Win32/Injector.KLZ Win32:Spyeye-YV [Trj] Trojan.Win32.In ject.bpoa Gen:Variant.Gra ftor.3243 VirTool:Win32/D elfInject.gen!C M
01341c165ed887fa134250750b2218c4 2012-08-27 2011-12-15 08:45:54 2012-01-19 04:40:25 Win32/AutoRun.Spy.Banker.M Win32:Spyware-g en [Spy] Trojan-Dropper. Win32.Dapato.sd d Trojan.Generic. KDV.479801 Worm:Win32/Crid ex.B Armadillo v1.71
014e076ae37f2e5e612ae748dd9e4177 2012-08-27 2011-11-11 03:24:24 2011-11-24 20:34:32 a variant of Win32/Injector.JMN Win32:Crypt-KLY [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Bu zus.iofc Trojan.Generic. 6686401 TrojanDropper:W in32/Sirefef.B
01525755f4b3c800560bdc4ac3c80cbd 2012-08-27 2011-03-09 19:58:13 2011-03-19 04:41:56 a variant of Win32/Injector.FBK Win32:Spyware-g en Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.SpyEyes.fqu Trojan.Generic. KDV.152375
019f9a5668d3de770f4c0a741a4f0c4a 2012-08-27 2012-03-28 01:18:38 2012-03-28 05:03:51 a variant of Win32/Injector.KCP Win32:Regrun-JI [Trj] HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Gen:Variant.Gra ftor.1584 Armadillo v1.71
01b36ef0ca621293f6c74c7b2950946a 2012-08-27 2012-01-06 23:55:08 2012-06-07 08:19:28 Win32/AutoRun.IRCBot.HO Win32:Malware-g en Trojan-Dropper. Win32.Injector. boyd Backdoor.Agent. ABAV Worm:Win32/Phor piex.B
01ceff3646dd40eaa11ed4cf7a75d495 2012-08-27 2012-03-21 00:04:37 2012-03-22 04:53:17 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.ACTR Win32:Spyeye-AC T [Trj] Trojan-FakeAV.W in32.Agent.dks Gen:Variant.Bre do.21 Rogue:Win32/Win websec
01d1d9f8c314a19e9f5cc7dc06693ea5 2012-08-27 2012-06-20 01:29:52 2012-06-20 01:29:52 Win32:Spyeye-WC [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Ge nome.acnzw Gen:Variant.Kaz y.37631 VirTool:Win32/O bfuscator.TT
01ef0b349a8b2c598f24fad77bb7d506 2012-08-27 2012-06-27 04:01:59 2012-06-27 04:01:59 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.HCV Win32:Malware-g en Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.SpyEyes.evw Trojan.Generic. KD.45757 Rogue:Win32/Win websec
02084edaa51e7bd688fc95c0ae86a29a 2012-08-27 2011-11-18 19:01:09 2011-11-21 15:55:16 a variant of Win32/Injector.KTW Win32:Spyeye-ZI [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.SpyEyes.qmg Trojan.Generic. KDV.399472 Trojan:Win32/Or sam!rts
022abced09dc8142069c88ce2ee06e55 2012-08-27 2012-06-22 23:18:26 2012-06-22 23:18:26 Win32/Spy.SpyEye.CA Win32:Zbot-NES [Trj] Net-Worm.Win32. Koobface.jcb Gen:Variant.Kaz y.25416
0234f794047645d090a47550cf229bd4 2012-08-27 2012-04-08 05:38:21 2012-06-13 10:50:56 probably a variant of Win32/Injector.KNA Win32:Malware-g en HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Gen:Trojan.Heur .VP2.eu0baiVzqp ii VirTool:Win32/V BInject.UG ASPack v2.12

 

—AVP  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

 

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
00ada89f87db0db0f3939271c34f865e 2012-08-27 2008-09-18 18:15:52 2009-04-27 12:34:23 probably a variant of Win32/Adware.RogueApp Win32:Adware-ge n not-a-virus:Fra udTool.Win32.Ag ent.r Adware.AntivirP rotection.A Program:Win32/A ntivirusProtect ion
0106605d11d29384522bfa17164fd943 2012-08-27 2012-03-22 10:32:32 2012-03-22 21:11:40 Win32:Dialer-AV P [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Di aler.qn Trojan.Mezzia.G en Trojan:Win32/Ad ialer.OP
014596c2ff3198b690bf2f3debcb0711 2012-08-27 2011-12-03 03:58:24 2011-12-05 21:04:13 Win32/Spy.Zbot.YW Win32:Trojan-ge n Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.coxf Trojan.Spy.Zbot .ETB PWS:Win32/Zbot UPX 2.90 [LZMA] -> Markus Oberhumer, Laszlo Molnar & John Reiser
01b37e56720a5bf5a85c103878100388 2012-08-27 2012-06-11 04:52:22 2012-06-11 04:52:22 Win32/Kryptik.AGSY Win32:Kryptik-I XH [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.dyuc Trojan.Agent.AV PE
01cd13a561ff5396604b8718e911b49f 2012-08-27 2011-11-17 13:29:53 2012-07-25 21:46:15 Win32:Trojan-ge n Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.Zbot.coxf Trojan.Spy.Zbot .ETB PWS:Win32/Zbot UPX UPX 2.90 [LZMA] -> Markus Oberhumer, Laszlo Molnar & John Reiser
01f699ef8a648642084f7d665c3c265e 2012-08-27 2011-10-15 19:56:04 2011-10-25 08:10:00 Win32/Olmarik.AVP Win32:Alureon-A FI [Trj] HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Gen:Variant.Kaz y.27650 Trojan:Win32/Al ureon.DX
0267027dd9091a7054ff9c46384c6654 2012-08-27 2012-02-04 10:24:19 2012-03-31 17:43:08 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.YVK Win32:MalOb-JA [Cryp] Gen:Variant.Kaz y.52638 Rogue:Win32/Fak eRean
03ceb31131f1a47c1388e9c8a53feca0 2012-08-27 2010-08-10 20:27:10 2011-02-05 09:10:23 a variant of Win32/Injector.CLG Win32:Malware-g en Trojan-Download er.Win32.Banloa d.bekw Worm.Generic.27 2239 TrojanSpy:Win32 /Swisyn.B
05740edf8ef59dfdcb3660b35e76052c 2012-08-27 2010-06-02 22:16:22 2012-08-01 23:09:46 Win32:Rootkit-g en [Rtk] Trojan.Win32.Sw isyn.avpt Trojan.Generic. KD.14612 Trojan:Win32/Tr ufip!rts Armadillo v1.71
06daf98aa5504f124d1f19bb23d8aa2b 2012-08-27 2012-02-20 01:00:55 2012-02-20 01:00:55 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.YMJ Win32:MalOb-IG [Cryp] Trojan.Win32.Fa keAV.kbsd Gen:Variant.Kaz y.51804 Rogue:Win32/Fak eRean
07837d8689d093ddfb90e0e873a40403 2012-08-27 2012-02-06 12:01:38 2012-08-04 03:14:45 Win32:FakeAlert -EM [Trj] Trojan-FakeAV.W in32.VirusDocto r.v Gen:Variant.Urs nif.2 Rogue:Win32/Fak eVimes
07ca5974da6c583b74870b97ca4418ba 2012-08-27 2011-02-04 10:40:03 2012-05-10 04:07:38 a variant of Win32/Spy.VB.NJM Win32:VB-QXQ [Spy] Trojan.Win32.VB Krypt.bavp Gen:Trojan.Heur .fm0@s5JEYbfih Trojan:Win32/Bu mat!rts
087347abfd1f071bcbd9ed2cd83742c3 2012-08-27 2011-11-15 22:10:35 2011-12-16 17:26:10 a variant of Win32/Agent.TCI Win32:Crypt-KWZ [Trj] HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Gen:Variant.Buz y.4378 Trojan:Win32/In ject.AL
089204eee8ae33f0301b90c43c55aef4 2012-08-27 2011-11-15 12:43:41 2011-12-06 23:11:43 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.VPK Win32:Gbot-M [Trj] Trojan-FakeAV.W in32.OpenCloud. p Trojan.Generic. 6850089 Rogue:Win32/Fak eScanti
09ee083b59b68fa0807dde46be7938a4 2012-08-27 2011-03-19 05:31:23 2011-03-20 00:07:52 Win32/Sirefef.C Win32:Delf-OHT Trojan.Win32.Fa keAV.avpj Trojan.Generic. KD.138388 Worm:Win32/Sire fef.gen!A
0a58fdc81e8bb0e2be92c805846f082e 2012-08-27 2012-01-28 19:43:01 2012-01-28 19:43:01 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.ZAZ Win32:ZAccess-E F [Trj] HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Gen:Variant.Kaz y.53282 Rogue:Win32/Fak eRean
0aa08ce7021f950a13167728fe7386a6 2012-08-27 2012-03-24 13:06:08 2012-05-30 19:28:26 a variant of Win32/Injector.PLK Win32:Crypt-MCG [Trj] HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Trojan.Generic. 7394229 Worm:Win32/Nayr abot.gen!A
0b3daa6dcf816fa34179197d6be16c21 2012-08-27 2012-01-17 00:16:22 2012-02-01 14:32:17 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.ZAZ Win32:ZAccess-E F [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Fa keAV.kmpm Gen:Variant.Kaz y.53282 Rogue:Win32/Fak eRean
0ce67f90dd1a936cbc08a6dea0e4d8ae 2012-08-27 2011-11-17 02:06:29 2012-02-09 06:37:16 a variant of Win32/Agent.TCI Win32:Crypt-KWZ [Trj] HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Gen:Variant.Buz y.4378 Trojan:Win32/In ject.AL
0cf1f914d2805a4cafa33ba9088424a2 2012-08-27 2012-01-17 13:30:31 2012-01-17 13:30:31 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.YWV Win32:Downloade r-MHD [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Fa keAV.kjsd Gen:Variant.Gra ftor.12856 Rogue:Win32/Fak eRean

 

—EICAR  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

 

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
14eb13beba07c82ba1851bce503cb034 2012-08-27 2011-09-06 11:15:30 2011-12-17 19:44:11 Eicar test file EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! EICAR-Test-File EICAR-Test-File (not a virus) Virus:DOS/EICAR _Test_File
16f8c3d67250837bc2e400ad19e0b72a 2012-08-27 2012-08-10 18:19:02 2012-08-15 16:50:23 BV:BVCK-gen3 P2P-Worm.BAT.Co pybat.ag UPX, PKLITE
2c64f48e5135fbaa944172202d236c7d 2012-08-27 2006-06-01 07:00:05 2012-08-20 00:47:44 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! EICAR-Test-File EICAR-Test-File (not a virus) Virus:DOS/EICAR _Test_File
317c6356b04926b4cf107df145289435 2012-08-27 2010-12-14 12:22:14 2012-08-12 02:15:31 AntiAVP-Avbad [Trj] Trojan.DOS.Avba d Trojan.Avbad.A Trojan:DOS/Avba d LZEXE, PKLITE
5c770e1490835247d0a541474ee51c50 2012-08-27 2012-07-26 12:10:50 2012-07-27 20:06:32 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! EICAR-Test-File
5e67103aa3baadde488fc8a66915610e 2012-08-27 2012-02-07 23:35:55 2012-04-07 06:45:15 EICAR-Test-File Virus:DOS/EICAR _Test_File
613a4ae52be7190a18c340f0ffa78fbd 2012-08-27 2012-07-21 14:15:28 2012-07-24 20:16:28 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! EICAR-Test-File
67cafd0c5fb22dc93815700230d368c3 2012-08-27 2012-07-26 12:19:57 2012-07-27 20:06:19 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! EICAR-Test-File
72015abc47f25b8f624a0b1b2eb3ebe0 2012-08-27 2012-01-30 00:23:27 2012-04-18 14:37:09 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! HEUR:Trojan.Win 32.Generic Trojan.Generic. 7358064 Virus:DOS/EICAR _Test_File
79449529d738e9a3ef5893efaf048da5 2012-08-27 2012-07-26 12:27:02 2012-07-27 20:05:41 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! EICAR-Test-File
82a83e6e1799f3886123614014ef07f4 2012-08-27 2012-07-21 15:02:40 2012-07-24 19:45:51 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! EICAR-Test-File
934162a08d4a38711083345ef0b57d14 2012-08-27 2008-03-22 05:39:27 2012-05-16 01:40:33 EICAR-Test-File Virus:DOS/EICAR _Test_File
9590348417ce24e4c1d0e1d8af4c4939 2012-08-27 2012-08-04 04:10:00 2012-08-09 00:43:00 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! EICAR-Test-File Virus:BAT/Mouse Disable.D
96cb4955ea6bab5f3c8524528401413c 2012-08-27 2009-11-30 16:14:16 2011-09-07 03:48:37 probably a variant of Win32/Agent.XRUNPA Win32:Malware-g en Trojan.Win32.Ge nome.qcad Trojan.Generic. 3199186 Trojan:Win32/Me redrop
a27ee916c22a51179c9e2f1ae67aa7eb 2012-08-27 2012-07-21 16:02:15 2012-07-24 19:45:21 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! EICAR-Test-File
a911a87a26153abe77c3b25c28615218 2012-08-27 2010-09-02 12:41:52 2010-09-02 23:44:58 Win32:Malware-g en Trojan.Win32.Co smu.dry Dropped:EICAR-T est-File (not a virus)
ac2ff734c993884834c5bb820d21f3f1 2012-08-27 2011-11-19 09:10:49 2012-07-30 18:46:08 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!! EICAR-Test-File
b07e6f95ddf91415897164d7b3eb4736 2012-08-27 2011-10-05 23:16:00 2011-10-05 23:16:00 Trojan.Script.7 133
c29bc4713727d469886ea655115dd177 2012-08-27 2012-08-04 04:28:58 2012-08-08 21:33:18 BV:Malware-gen IRC-Worm.BAT.Ge neric Trojan.Batzz99. A Virus:BAT/Adiou s.A embedded
c9357c00c4da9e9fd8add93e917c57c6 2012-08-27 2012-07-21 17:35:39 2012-07-26 20:06:19 EICAR Test-NOT virus!!!

 

 

—mistfall  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
31484725213be800bc1d69cb0ece77aa 2012-08-27 2012-08-10 18:00:33 2012-08-13 13:48:27 Win32:Mistfall [Tool] VirTool.Win32.M istfall VirTool:Win32/M istfall
50e4913a0d73f61279101d08a6e983a5 1970-01-01 2006-06-11 16:14:34 2012-04-15 22:14:43 Win32/VirTool.Mistfall Win32:Mistfall [Tool] VirTool.Win32.M istfall VirTool:Win32/M istfall

 

 

 

 

 

—rBot =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
2af4783aba321f53082085e8937b2567 2012-08-28 2012-07-11 23:52:26 2012-08-26 04:26:41 Win32:Virtob Backdoor.Win32. Rbot.adqd Trojan.Generic. 5333379 Virus:Win32/Vir ut.AC
865915650a85e7c27cdd11850a13f86e 2012-08-28 2006-09-03 07:01:30 2012-06-17 17:26:56 Win32/Rbot Win32:Rbot-GKN [Trj] Net-Worm.Win32. Kolab.aefe IRC-Worm.Generi c.22084 Backdoor:Win32/ Rbot
00157f6de1c95255bb781e45088d9a21 2012-08-27 2012-06-24 18:13:49 2012-06-24 18:13:49 Win32/Rbot.YM Trojan.Win32.Ge nome.dnsq IRC-Worm.Generi c.15028 Backdoor:Win32/ Rbot
0024542e9282e2fe0c0ca9b0c0b6f43a 2012-08-27 2012-02-18 10:11:27 2012-04-16 16:12:13 Win32/Virut.NBP Win32:Rbot-GQG [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. LolBot.xzd Worm.Generic.29 8540 Trojan:Win32/Fa kefolder.B
002984263e0d36042f0a4e613f9b9b46 2012-08-27 2009-02-24 07:24:34 2009-02-24 07:24:34 probably a variant of Win32/Rbot Win32:Trojan-ge n {Other} Backdoor.Win32. Rbot.fat Backdoor.Bot.17 676 ASProtect v1.23 RC1
002d88dc3184ac1cc52018a4a34d02c4 2012-08-27 2011-09-15 04:06:24 2011-09-15 04:06:24 a variant of Win32/Injector.IIQ Win32:Sality Worm.Win32.Ngrb ot.cnh Trojan.Generic. KDV.304762 Worm:Win32/Dork bot.gen!A Armadillo v1.71
00423373be53630ab1ceea85fa574939 2012-08-27 2011-04-02 04:52:43 2012-08-17 14:22:42 Trojan.Generic. 6907346 Backdoor:Win32/ Rbot.gen!G
00492917b6eb3d9c6d62f86f9acc6bce 2012-08-27 2012-06-25 00:19:05 2012-06-25 00:19:05 Backdoor.Win32. Rbot.umw Backdoor.Bot.60 974 Dev-C++ 4.9.9.2 -> Bloodshed Software
0052a28dc60cac68b54ddf8f02d5aa5d 2012-08-27 2010-07-18 23:41:47 2010-07-18 23:41:47 a variant of Win32/Packed.Themida Gen:Trojan.Heur .RqX@5Gy!Zup Backdoor:Win32/ Bifrose.gen!C
0066ad4c5a1206fb6563a285f2ce14a0 2012-08-27 2012-06-22 19:57:07 2012-06-22 19:57:07 a variant of Win32/Packed.Themida Backdoor.Win32. Rbot.akio Trojan.Generic. 7352279 Themida
006e7190f10953306ba5846d272af457 2012-08-27 2011-03-13 17:31:06 2012-02-11 09:09:57 probably a variant of Win32/Agent.COLWWTQ Win32:Spyware-g en [Spy] Backdoor.Win32. Rbot.alyk Gen:Trojan.Heur .GM.0140430082 Backdoor:Win32/ Ursap!rts
006f203bee46359995b68b8f0f95dea1 2012-08-27 2011-12-03 11:22:06 2012-02-11 09:20:43 Win32/TrojanDropper.Delf.NJH Win32:Bifrose-D YN [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Rbot.hyj Trojan.Keylogge r.ADY TrojanDropper:W in32/Agent.BAD
008e7e1d54316b2f2e6aebd0861a37fe 2012-08-27 2012-06-24 02:14:52 2012-06-24 02:14:52 a variant of Win32/Rbot Win32:EggDrop-A C [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Rbot.boz Backdoor.Rbot.E UT Backdoor:Win32/ Rbot.gen!F
00a649781cf7d8153bd9af03d0ce5cd9 2012-08-27 2012-06-25 01:54:32 2012-06-25 01:54:32 a variant of Win32/Injector.OI Win32:Rbot-GLC [Trj] Trojan.Win32.Bu zus.bnsz Trojan.Generic. 1809892 VirTool:Win32/I njector.gen!B Armadillo v1.71
00ad7e4470086e1345b017876fd41619 2012-08-27 2011-09-11 16:46:41 2011-11-14 20:47:48 a variant of Win32/Packed.MoleboxUltra Win32:Malware-g en Backdoor.Win32. Rbot.hyj Trojan.Generic. 4200368 TrojanDropper:W in32/Agent.BAD
00d753fcbad0dc47101d3818d491a7e7 2012-08-27 2012-06-21 13:36:05 2012-06-21 13:36:05 Win32/TrojanDownloader.Agent.OST Win32:Trojan-ge n not-a-virus:AdW are.Win32.ZenoS earch.ky Trojan.Generic. 1385769 Trojan:Win32/Vu ndo
00e9816f69922b9c43f89dc0a92a99d1 2012-08-27 2008-12-27 13:34:07 2010-01-22 01:10:12 Backdoor.Bot.89 803 Xtreme-Protecto r v1.05
00eee20b71e92f57ded4b497e5dbdaf1 2012-08-27 2008-05-05 22:13:17 2008-05-05 22:13:17 Win32:Small-BHA Backdoor.Prorat .C Armadillo v1.71
00fc84692d5b22e4ecb3d8022ea86698 2012-08-27 2012-06-27 09:22:01 2012-06-27 09:22:01 a variant of Win32/Spy.Delf.NLM Win32:Agent-ACQ U [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Rbot.agyp Gen:Trojan.Heur .PT.ei4abKk10V Trojan:Win32/De lf.EZ Malware_Prot.AJ themida 1.0.0.5 -> http://www.orea ns.com
00fc850b10d54e404cc1ff521ad10ea6 2012-08-27 2008-04-28 16:59:58 2008-05-06 12:24:21 Xtreme-Protecto r v1.05
Checked on VT at 2012-09-10 12:39:43
Scanned at 2012-08-26 04:26:41
Fi

 

—proRAT  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
0023b2d76c606328688afa5ade9c0acf 2012-08-27 2009-10-25 02:21:28 2009-10-25 02:21:28 a variant of Win32/Packed.Themida Win32:Bifrose-D RI Gen:Trojan.Heur .dvXarDpNMyoi Backdoor:Win32/ Prorat.AH
0043b0517c628ef897f477e4345fd7a3 2012-08-27 2010-07-02 02:34:55 2012-02-11 12:45:38 a variant of Win32/Packed.Themida Win32:Malware-g en Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.uft Backdoor:Win32/ Ursap!rts
0054c6b833c013f32bced841e1e6739d 2012-08-27 2009-10-19 17:19:55 2009-10-19 17:19:55 probably unknown NewHeur_PE Win32:Trojan-ge n MemScan:Backdoo r.Agent.ZNH Backdoor:Win32/ Prorat.AM
0073d646cf945a4b5b3ba513b87a3c60 2012-08-27 2012-06-20 00:16:55 2012-06-20 00:16:55 a variant of Win32/Prorat.19.NAC Win32:Malware-g en Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.efu MemScan:Backdoo r.Delf.HBZ Backdoor:Win32/ Prorat.AM Obsidium V1.3.0.4 -> Obsidium Software
008e37fd9125255f6a25e19fc7640bea 2012-08-27 2012-06-05 10:42:20 2012-06-05 10:42:20 Win32:Spyware-g en [Spy] Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.het Trojan.Generic. 4484805
0090c0275880256778d156f7b08e8f03 2012-08-27 2011-03-15 10:52:42 2011-04-13 18:37:22 Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.rft Gen:Trojan.Heur .dr3a4ScZqsdi
00a490a8595793e54caa7e9a38768891 2012-08-27 2008-10-01 16:13:23 2008-10-01 16:13:23 probably unknown NewHeur_PE Win32:Agent-ONW MemScan:Backdoo r.Agent.ZNH ASProtect v1.23 RC1
00eee20b71e92f57ded4b497e5dbdaf1 2012-08-27 2008-05-05 22:13:17 2008-05-05 22:13:17 Win32:Small-BHA Backdoor.Prorat .C Armadillo v1.71
00fc839a3e3d2986cceca58ae900ce13 2012-08-27 2010-08-18 21:00:24 2010-08-24 10:54:38 Win32/Packed.Themida.A Win32:Malware-g en Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.19.dht Trojan.Packed.L ibix.Gen.2 VirTool:Win32/O bfuscator.XX
0100ca070eda3acfbdfbf2424612cc5f 2012-08-27 2010-12-14 03:58:20 2012-06-07 07:22:17 a variant of Win32/Injector.BLB Win32:VB-PJN [Drp] Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.hhw Backdoor.Generi c.319260 Trojan:Win32/VB Inject.E
0121a89cb657a11e5dd092883bfd7825 2012-08-27 2010-07-17 07:37:48 2010-07-17 07:37:48 a variant of Win32/TrojanDropper.Delf.NFK Win32:Prorat-JE Gen:Trojan.Heur .GM.0408470024
017d509b8598921ed40744e0ca829db6 2012-08-27 2009-06-22 12:28:25 2009-06-22 12:28:25 Win32:Trojan-ge n {Other} Gen:Trojan.Heur .VB.1025DA9A9A Trojan:Win32/Ma lat
01e7cbd34f8bd3cf5fa608baf2fa6d60 2012-08-27 2011-11-15 13:23:32 2012-02-12 07:10:28 Win32/Prorat.NAH Win32:Prorat-FE [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.dz Backdoor.Generi c.21020 Backdoor:Win32/ Prorat.K
01e93b84d7df6bac7cde630ffffd043f 2012-08-27 2010-05-20 13:53:52 2012-06-09 12:47:16 a variant of Win32/RemoteAnything.AA Win32:Trojan-ge n Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.hoj Packer.Malware. NSAnti.1 Backdoor:Win32/ VB.OF
01ea64f575a9f95563ffeef45fb09ca2 2012-08-27 2012-06-27 09:46:59 2012-06-27 09:46:59 Win32/Prorat.19 Win32:Prorat-BH [Trj] Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.kcm Backdoor.Prorat .19.I Backdoor:Win32/ Prorat.Z ASPack v2.12
02119a21b4b339dd367769c2aebd622c 2012-08-27 2008-11-04 18:23:06 2009-12-05 01:59:16 probably a variant of Win32/Agent Win32:Trojan-ge n Backdoor.Win32. ProRat.cqf Trojan.Generic. 1859606
022cb4ec9e03596701cdc5252c09d0e9 2012-08-27 2012-06-25 18:49:03 2012-06-25 18:49:03 a variant of Win32/Injector.EJM Win32:Trojan-ge n Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.efy Gen:Trojan.Heur .Dropper.bm0@aa gNUVni VirTool:Win32/V BInject.AZ
0247d8561b2a3b8338aa2eff5632f212 2012-08-27 2009-10-13 11:06:04 2009-11-08 22:05:55 Win32:Prorat-IR Backdoor.Win32. ProRat.fns MemScan:Backdoo r.Agent.ZNH Backdoor:Win32/ Prorat
0248b3729a47c970cbd5c43e7298d3dc 2012-08-27 2012-06-21 15:25:52 2012-06-21 15:25:52 a variant of Win32/GameHack.AL Win32:Trojan-ge n Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.fwr Backdoor.Turkoj an.AF Backdoor:Win32/ Turkojan.AI
024c8882871ba3921c2f243ad96e3956 2012-08-27 2012-06-19 17:50:01 2012-06-19 17:50:01 probably a variant of Win32/Agent.LTWPXFW Win32:Trojan-ge n Backdoor.Win32. Prorat.evo MemScan:Backdoo r.ProRat.TG Backdoor:Win32/ Prorat.U

—lostDoor – proRAT kinda  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

 

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
cb5c84f6f7e682d9cba2ecba677336c4 1970-01-01 2010-12-04 10:25:27 2012-04-04 22:06:55 a variant of Win32/Spy.KeyLogger.NHM Win32:Agent-ABM I [Trj] Trojan-Spy.Win3 2.VBChuchelo.ah Trojan.Generic. 161562 TrojanSpy:Win32 /Choochie.K

 

 

—Ultimate_Spy-Net  =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

action md5 insert date First seen Last seen nod32 avast kaspersky bitdefender microsoft f_prot_unpacker peid
0058368c1856f88556e881d203441805 2012-08-27 2012-06-24 11:10:36 2012-06-24 11:10:36 a variant of Win32/TrojanDownloader.FakeAlert.NQ Win32:Lighty-B [Cryp] Trojan.Win32.Vi lsel.mfb Packer.Malware. Lighty.I TrojanDownloade r:Win32/Renos
00adc990cbf1e4733fdf3afbdf54938a 2012-08-27 2012-06-23 11:17:18 2012-06-23 11:17:18 a variant of Win32/TrojanDownloader.FakeAlert.NQ Win32:Lighty-B [Cryp] Backdoor.Win32. UltimateDefende r.hiw Packer.Malware. Lighty.I Trojan:Win32/Wa ntvi.I
00c547fb1918bcef0a864161b33f0ead 2012-08-27 2010-12-30 22:38:00 2012-02-11 06:34:55 a variant of Win32/Adware.Antivirus2008 Win32:FakeAV-M [Trj] Trojan-FakeAV.W in32.UltimateAn tivirus.g Trojan.Generic. 365345 Rogue:Win32/Fak eSecSen ASPack v2.12
00cbcdff13e5c710341393a19d260da6 2012-08-27 2008-07-28 12:42:05 2009-10-16 10:45:20 probably a variant of Win32/Adware.Antivirus2008 Win32:Trojan-ge n not-a-virus:Fra udTool.Win32.Ul timateAntivirus .ag Trojan.Generic. 669380 Trojan:Win32/Fa keSecSen ASProtect v1.23 RC1
0279f3e2593cb0130e2616de1e4ebb76 2012-08-27 2008-06-18 11:50:19 2012-02-12 23:45:25 Win32/Adware.WinAntiVirus Win32:FakeAV-M [Trj] Trojan-FakeAV.W in32.UltimateAn tivirus.cl Adware.Rogue.Ad vancedAntivirus .A Rogue:Win32/Fak eSecSen Armadillo v1.xx – v2.xx
029eea83722c549f099d423418b8a54a 2012-08-27 2008-10-17 23:58:48 2011-02-26 10:22:25 a variant of Win32/TrojanDownloader.FakeAlert.NQ Win32:Lighty-B Trojan-Dropper. Win32.Wlord.ahu Packer.Malware. Lighty.I TrojanDropper:W in32/Rooter.B
0305fbcff971eabd81d5ddadd29e6ec1 2012-08-27 2008-08-22 16:42:43 2011-07-18 05:11:41 probably a variant of Win32/Adware.Antivirus2008 Win32:Neptunia- AGB [Trj] not-a-virus:Fra udTool.Win32.Ul timateAntivirus .bi Trojan.Fakeav.B C Rogue:Win32/Fak eSecSen ASPack v2.12
0358ecdc802150626cec39052e43132b 2012-08-27 2008-11-03 08:08:58 2011-08-26 21:27:41 Win32/TrojanDownloader.FakeAlert.PL.Gen Win32:Lighty-D [Cryp] Backdoor.Win32. UltimateDefende r.gsv Trojan.FakeAler t.ANE TrojanDownloade r:Win32/Renos.F J
0452ca3a273127a940c491a87806b047 2012-08-27 2008-08-28 06:23:10 2008-10-22 05:12:57 not-a-virus:Fra udTool.Win32.Ul timateAntivirus .bu Program:Win32/A ntivirus2008 ASPack v2.12
057abdd8f6d1f61eef9434b5e7daa4c6 2012-08-27 2011-07-27 19:30:35 2011-10-20 22:26:38 Win32/Adware.UltimateDefender Win32:FraudTool -GY [Tool] Backdoor.Win32. UltimateDefende r.pq Trojan.Generic. 6410781 Trojan:Win32/An omaly.gen!A UPX UPX 2.90 [LZMA] -> Markus Oberhumer, Laszlo Molnar & John Reiser
06fbf01caa783f46421a0bbedf97719e 2012-08-27 2012-06-19 23:11:45 2012-06-19 23:11:45 probably a variant of Win32/Kryptik.FD Win32:Lighty-E [Cryp] Backdoor.Win32. UltimateDefende r.hwp Trojan.FakeAler t.ANE Trojan:Win32/Wa ntvi.I
08226ab7f48461cb78d33b985ec2fa4f 2012-08-27 2008-08-25 12:55:04 2009-05-01 22:36:49 Win32/Adware.Antivirus2008 Win32:Neptunia- AGB not-a-virus:Fra udTool.Win32.Ul timateAntivirus .bq Trojan.Fakealer t.ALL Trojan:Win32/Fa keSecSen ASPack v2.12
085381cd16ef4f9c6cf03ce79f77b35f 2012-08-27 2009-04-16 21:00:47 2009-04-16 21:00:47 probably a variant of Win32/Adware.Antivirus2008 Win32:Neptunia- AGB not-a-virus:Fra udTool.Win32.Ul timateAntivirus .by Trojan.Fakeav.B C Trojan:Win32/Fa keSecSen ASPack v2.12
09cb0a224418027c40f9552c56180750 2012-08-27 2008-12-02 10:46:37 2009-09-12 07:57:49 a variant of Win32/Kryptik.CH Win32:Lighty-H Backdoor.Win32. UltimateDefende r.hki Trojan.Generic. 1730997 TrojanDownloade r:Win32/Renos.F J
0b55b43d8ec5898f408707ac069300b6 2012-08-27 2008-07-10 12:31:24 2011-08-15 04:38:12 Win32/Adware.Antivirus2008 Win32:FakeAlert -S [Trj] Trojan-FakeAV.W in32.UltimateAn tivirus.dp Trojan.FakeAv.B U Rogue:Win32/Fak eSecSen ASProtect v1.23 RC1
0c243bffc29aab2ea6e4abb65319f33c 2012-08-27 2008-09-19 14:03:15 2012-02-09 08:34:42 Win32/Adware.Antivirus2008 Win32:Neptunia- AGB [Trj] Trojan-FakeAV.W in32.UltimateAn tivirus.cp Trojan.Fakeav.B C Rogue:Win32/Fak eSecSen ASPack v2.12
0e4eaff4a610c160e9cfbe4b01463295 2012-08-27 2009-07-21 00:34:56 2009-11-15 11:49:01 probably a variant of Win32/UltimateDefender.A Win32:Agent-QNI Backdoor.Win32. UltimateDefende r.ieq Generic.Malware .P!.6473D4B8 VirTool:WinNT/X antvi.gen!A
0f27d07f89550dcae7050f3c100137f3 2012-08-27 2008-03-29 22:49:29 2008-10-29 15:07:04 not-a-virus:Fra udTool.Win32.Ul timateDefender. cm Trojan.Crypt.AN Trojan:Win32/Ti bs.gen!H
0f388783e9960156399c343ea7a70e24 2012-08-27 2008-11-03 20:53:28 2009-05-26 21:41:40 Win32/TrojanDownloader.FakeAlert.PL.Gen Win32:Lighty-D Backdoor.Win32. UltimateDefende r.gky Trojan.FakeAler t.ANE TrojanClicker:W in32/Klik
102009d4b848bd264753f877dae939a4 2012-08-27 2008-08-27 07:34:09 2012-01-24 08:11:37 probably a variant of Win32/Adware.Antivirus2008 Win32:Neptunia- AGB [Trj] Trojan-FakeAV.W in32.UltimateAn tivirus.bw Trojan.Fakeav.B C Rogue:Win32/Fak eSecSen ASPack v2.12

 

 

09/19/12

Tor Network Directory Project

Lately we all heard of Silk Road the underground cyber marketplace were you can buy illegal drugs and guns and people say all the bad guy’s are using the dark web for crime stuff – yeah DuDe:—:. It’s is just the Tor onion network, if you want to visit the onion network just go to torproject.org and download their bundle software and go surfing in the onion network. Since there is no bing, google or yahoo in the onion network, if you want a directory of what’s out in onion land just go to the hidden wiki. “Cleaned Hidden Wiki”- http://3suaolltfj2xjksb.onion/hiddenwiki/index.php/Main_Page.

The wiki is built by one of the founders of the onion netowk the administrator of MyHiddenBlog in – (- “http://utup22qsb6ebeejs.onion/” — ) and volunteers built The “Cleaned Hidden Wiki” .It is one of the few places were you can find some of the hidden services (websites) in Tor, in other words the only websites in Tor that want to be found. You see in the Tor onion network your site is your secret, your site is hidden because there is no google or yahoo to send web crawler out into the onion network. The USCyberlabs Tor Network Directory Project will be the first time that we go out actively and collect all the websites (hidden services) that are hiding in the Tor onion network.

When I started to write about Tor and our new (“The Deep Dark Web”) -book, I was contacted by the FBI about what I was writing about Tor and the hidden services and attack vectors in Tor. They wanted to be gAtO’s bff. I must admit I was intimidated and walked a very careful line with my blog postings and my tweets. Why because the FBI want to fuck with lawful security researchers that come to close to the truth about Tor.

They do not want this mapping of the Tor onion network. Why? The mapping of the Tor onion network will show all sites even the ones that want to stay hidden. Like government sites? Like Spy sites? I mentioned Bots with Tor c&c yeah government stuff. You of course have your corporate presence in the hidden services of Tor what will these Tor website show. Maybe it’s not just the bad guy using Tor, maybe.

There are currently only 9 directory servers in the Tor infrastructure that know all the sites on Tor and getting this list is kind of hard. Tor is design not to give out directory information to just anyone. We also want more than a URL of a live site, we will gather all meta-data so we can understand what these sites are all about. Google’s web crawlers do it every second of the day so we will send out crawlers into the Tor onion network to generate our directory of Tor.

The ToR Directory Scan Project (TDS) 

The uscyberlabs TDS Project- is to scan every address possibility and to generate a directory of every single live hidden service in the ToR-.onion network.

Figuring out the rendezvous for a hidden service is complicated, we attack the problem from the side —>> so the onion URL is 16 digits 2-7 a-z  plus the .onion after the url address. It’s easy to have a simple web crawler program count and a,b,c and generate a sequential-alphabetized URL list. Now due to the ToR network things work slow – old style modem speed that you young kids are not used to. Now we feed a URL wait up to 25-35 seconds then list a positive or no-go. Once we have a live hit list of possible live hidden services then we visit manually. And build a working verified w/login and password list of every hidden service on ToR.

with 100 VM we can scan Tor in weeks with 1000 machines we can scan the Tor network within days.

I tested the unix “curl command” in Tor with sock5 and it’s very good at extracting information from a website. So a simple script in will feed all the machines and they will start the scan. Once finish we take all the results and we will have a directory of every single hidden service in Tor land.

gAtO needs your help!

09/17/12

Tor setup- torrc file configuration

gAtO bEen- working on Tor stuff and wanted to find the right torrc commands and configuration for Tor. So I started to look around and found these files. I guess if we look at these we could come up with maybe all the configurations keywords for Tor. gAtO is working on Tor and maybe some bot’s woking in Tor-land. The word is out and many are working on Tor botnets the good thing is most all are beginners, but the interest of people not wanting to rent a bot but build a bot is getting stronger. People wanting to learn code. Script kiddies with code this is not going to be pretty folks – hope you enjoy the torrc stuff- gAtO oUt

File 1

## Configuration file for a typical Tor user

## Last updated 17 September 2012 @gAtOmAlO2 .

## (May or may not work for much older or much newer versions of Tor.)

##

## Lines that begin with “## ” try to explain what’s going on. Lines

## that begin with just “#” are disabled commands: you can enable them

## by removing the “#” symbol.

##

## See the man page, or https://svn.torproject.org/svn/tor/tags/tor-0_0_9_5/src/config/torrc.sample.in ,

## for more options you can use in this file.

##

## Tor will look for this file in various places based on your platform:

## http://wiki.noreply.org/noreply/TheOnionRouter/TorFAQ#torrc

## Replace this with “SocksPort 0″ if you plan to run Tor only as a

## server, and not make any local application connections yourself.

SocksPort 9050 # what port to open for local application connections

SocksListenAddress 127.0.0.1 # accept connections only from localhost

#SocksListenAddress 192.168.0.1:9100 # listen on this IP:port also

 

## Entry policies to allow/deny SOCKS requests based on IP address.

## First entry that matches wins. If no SocksPolicy is set, we accept

## all (and only) requests from SocksListenAddress.

#SocksPolicy accept 192.168.0.0/16

#SocksPolicy reject *

 

## Logs go to stdout at level “notice” unless redirected by something

## else, like one of the below lines. You can have as many Log lines as

## you want.

##

## We advise using “notice” in most cases, since anything more verbose

## may provide sensitive information to an attacker who obtains the logs.

##

## Send all messages of level ‘notice’ or higher to /var/log/tor/notices.log

#Log notice file /var/log/tor/notices.log

## Send every possible message to /var/log/tor/debug.log

#Log debug file /var/log/tor/debug.log

## Use the system log instead of Tor’s logfiles

#Log notice syslog

## To send all messages to stderr:

#Log debug stderr

 

## Uncomment this to start the process in the background… or use

## –runasdaemon 1 on the command line. This is ignored on Windows;

## see the FAQ entry if you want Tor to run as an NT service.

#RunAsDaemon 1

 

## Tor only trusts directories signed with one of these keys, and

## uses the given addresses to connect to the trusted directory

## servers. If no DirServer lines are specified, Tor uses the built-in

## defaults (moria1, moria2, tor26), so you can leave this alone unless

## you need to change it.

#DirServer 18.244.0.188:9031 FFCB 46DB 1339 DA84 674C 70D7 CB58 6434 C437 0441

#DirServer 18.244.0.114:80 719B E45D E224 B607 C537 07D0 E214 3E2D 423E 74CF

#DirServer 62.116.124.106:9030 847B 1F85 0344 D787 6491 A548 92F9 0493 4E4E B85D

 

## The directory for keeping all the keys/etc. By default, we store

## things in $HOME/.tor on Unix, and in Application Data\tor on Windows.

#DataDirectory @LOCALSTATEDIR@/lib/tor

 

## The directory for keeping all the keys/etc. By default, we store

## things in $HOME/.tor on Unix, and in Application Data\tor on Windows.

#DataDirectory /var/lib/tor

 

## The port on which Tor will listen for local connections from Tor

## controller applications, as documented in control-spec.txt.

#ControlPort 9051

 

############### bypass open DNS ###############

##

## ACRYLIC DNS PROXY ==
## http://sourceforge.net/projects/acrylic/
##
## Step 1 INSTALL TOR
## Step 2 INSTALL ACRYLIC DNS PROXY

##

Acrylic is a local DNS proxy which improves the performance of your computer by caching the responses coming from your DNS servers. When you browse a Web page a portion of the loading time is dedicated to name resolution (usually from a few milliseconds to 1 second or even more) while the rest is dedicated to the transfer of the page contents to your browser. What Acrylic does is to reduce the time dedicated to name resolution for frequently visited addresses as close to zero as possible. With Acrylic you can also gracefully overcome short downtimes of your DNS servers without disrupting your work, because in this case you will at least be able to connect to your favourite sites and to your email server. In addition Acrylic can help you to effectively block unwanted ads prior to their download through the use of a custom HOSTS files, optimizing your navigation experience even further.

## Copy the following and paste it in TOR BROWSER\Data\TOR\torrc

## DNSPort 9053
## AutomapHostsOnResolve 1
## AutomapHostsSuffixes .exit,.onion

##

##

##

############### bypass open DNS ###############

############### This section is just for location-hidden services ###

## Look in …/hidden_service/hostname for the address to tell people.

## HiddenServicePort x y:z says to redirect a port x request from the

## client to y:z.

 

#HiddenServiceDir @LOCALSTATEDIR@/lib/tor/hidden_service/

#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80

 

#HiddenServiceDir @LOCALSTATEDIR@/lib/tor/other_hidden_service/

#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80

#HiddenServicePort 22 127.0.0.1:22

#HiddenServiceNodes moria1,moria2

#HiddenServiceExcludeNodes bad,otherbad

## Once you have configured a hidden service, you can look at the

## contents of the file “…/hidden_service/hostname” for the address

## to tell people.

##

## HiddenServicePort x y:z says to redirect requests on port x to the

## address y:z.

 

#HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/hidden_service/

#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80

 

#HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/other_hidden_service/

#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80

#HiddenServicePort 22 127.0.0.1:22

 

################ This section is just for relays ###################

## See https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-doc-relay for details.

 

## A unique handle for your server.

 

#Nickname ididnteditheconfig

 

## The IP or FQDN for your server. Leave commented out and Tor will guess.

 

#Address noname.example.com

 

## Define these to limit the bandwidth usage of relayed (server)

## traffic. Your own traffic is still unthrottled.

## Note that RelayBandwidthRate must be at least 20 KB.

 

#RelayBandwidthRate 100 KBytes  # Throttle traffic to 100KB/s (800Kbps)

#RelayBandwidthBurst 200 KBytes # But allow bursts up to 200KB/s (1600Kbps)

 

## Contact info to be published in the directory, so we can contact you

## if your server is misconfigured or something else goes wrong.

#ContactInfo Random Person <nobody AT example dot com>

## You might also include your PGP or GPG fingerprint if you have one:

 

#ContactInfo 1234D/FFFFFFFF Random Person <nobody AT example dot com>

 

## Required: what port to advertise for Tor connections.

#ORPort 9001

## If you need to listen on a port other than the one advertised

## in ORPort (e.g. to advertise 443 but bind to 9090), uncomment the

## line below too. You’ll need to do ipchains or other port forwarding

## yourself to make this work.

 

#ORListenAddress 0.0.0.0:9090

 

## Uncomment this to mirror directory information for others. Please do

## if you have enough bandwidth.

#DirPort 9030 # what port to advertise for directory connections

## If you need to listen on a port other than the one advertised

## in DirPort (e.g. to advertise 80 but bind to 9091), uncomment the line

## below too. You’ll need to do ipchains or other port forwarding yourself

## to make this work.

 

#DirListenAddress 0.0.0.0:9091

 

## Uncomment this if you run more than one Tor server, and add the

## nickname of each Tor server you control, even if they’re on different

## networks. You declare it here so Tor clients can avoid using more than

## one of your servers in a single circuit. See

## http://wiki.noreply.org/noreply/TheOnionRouter/TorFAQ#MultipleServers

 

#MyFamily nickname1,nickname2,…

 

## A comma-separated list of exit policies. They’re considered first

## to last, and the first match wins. If you want to _replace_

## the default exit policy, end this with either a reject *:* or an

## accept *:*. Otherwise, you’re _augmenting_ (prepending to) the

## default exit policy. Leave commented to just use the default, which is

## available in the man page or at https://www.torproject.org/documentation.html

##

## Look at https://www.torproject.org/faq-abuse.html#TypicalAbuses

## for issues you might encounter if you use the default exit policy.

##

## If certain IPs and ports are blocked externally, e.g. by your firewall,

## you should update your exit policy to reflect this — otherwise Tor

## users will be told that those destinations are down.

##

#ExitPolicy accept *:6660-6667,reject *:* # allow irc ports but no more

#ExitPolicy accept *:119 # accept nntp as well as default exit policy

#ExitPolicy reject *:* # no exits allowed

#

################ This section is just for bridge relays ##############

#

## Bridge relays (or “bridges” ) are Tor relays that aren’t listed in the

## main directory. Since there is no complete public list of them, even if an

## ISP is filtering connections to all the known Tor relays, they probably

## won’t be able to block all the bridges. Unlike running an exit relay,

## running a bridge relay just passes data to and from the Tor network –

## so it shouldn’t expose the operator to abuse complaints.

 

#ORPort 443

#BridgeRelay 1

#RelayBandwidthRate 50KBytes

#ExitPolicy reject *:*

 

File 2

################ This section is just for servers #####################

 

## NOTE: If you enable these, you should consider mailing your identity

## key fingerprint to the tor-ops, so we can add you to the list of

## servers that clients will trust. See the README for details.

 

## Required: A unique handle for this server

#Nickname ididnteditheconfig

 

## The IP or fqdn for this server. Leave blank and Tor will guess.

#Address noname.example.com

 

#ContactInfo 1234D/FFFFFFFF Random Person <nobody@example.com>

 

## Required: what port to advertise for tor connections

#ORPort 9001

## If you want to listen on a port other than the one advertised

## in ORPort, uncomment the line below. You’ll need to do ipchains

## or other port forwarding yourself to make this work.

#ORBindAddress 0.0.0.0:9090

 

## Uncomment this to mirror the directory for others (please do)

#DirPort 9030 # what port to advertise for directory connections

## If you want to listen on a port other than the one advertised

## in DirPort, uncomment the line below. You’ll need to do ipchains

## or other port forwarding yourself to make this work.

#DirBindAddress 0.0.0.0:9091

 

## A comma-separated list of exit policies. They’re considered first

## to last, and the first match wins. If you want to *replace*

## the default exit policy, end this with either a reject *:* or an

## accept *:*. Otherwise, you’re *augmenting* (prepending to) the

## default exit policy. Leave commented to just use the default.

#ExitPolicy accept *:6660-6667

#ExitPolicy reject 192.168.0.1:*

#ExitPolicy reject *:*

 

#BridgeRelay 1

#ExitPolicy reject *:*

 

File 3

Index: torrc.sample.in

===================================================================

RCS file: /home/or/cvsroot/src/config/torrc.sample.in,v

retrieving revision 1.31

retrieving revision 1.32

diff -u -d -r1.31 -r1.32

— torrc.sample.in 10 Nov 2004 00:14:02 -0000 1.31

+++ torrc.sample.in 12 Nov 2004 04:00:07 -0000 1.32

@@ -1,73 +1,76 @@

-# Configuration file for a typical tor user

+## Configuration file for a typical tor user

 

-# Replace this with “SocksPort 0″ if you don’t want clients to connect.

+## Replace this with “SocksPort 0″ if you don’t want clients to connect.

SocksPort 9050 # what port to advertise for application connections

SocksBindAddress 127.0.0.1 # accept connections only from localhost

#SocksBindAddress 192.168.0.1:9100 # listen on a chosen IP/port

 

-# Entry policies to allow/deny SOCKS requests based on IP address.

-# First entry that matches wins. If no SocksPolicy is set, we accept

-# all (and only) requests from SocksBindAddress.

-#

+## Entry policies to allow/deny SOCKS requests based on IP address.

+## First entry that matches wins. If no SocksPolicy is set, we accept

+## all (and only) requests from SocksBindAddress.

#SocksPolicy accept 192.168.0.1/16

#SocksPolicy reject *

 

-# Allow no-name routers (ones that the dirserver operators don’t

-# know anything about) in only these positions in your circuits.

-# Other choices (not advised) are entry,exit,introduction.

+## Allow no-name routers (ones that the dirserver operators don’t

+## know anything about) in only these positions in your circuits.

+## Other choices (not advised) are entry,exit,introduction.

AllowUnverifiedNodes middle,rendezvous

 

-# Logs go to stdout unless redirected by something else, like one of

-# the below lines, or –logfile on the command line.

-### Send all messages of level ‘warn’ or higher to @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/warnings

-#Log warn file @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/warnings

-### Send all debug and info messages to @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/debug

-#Log debug-info file @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/debug

-### Send all debug messages ONLY to @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/debug

-#Log debug-debug file @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/debug

-### To use the system log instead of Tor’s logfiles, uncomment these lines:

+## Logs go to stdout unless redirected by something else, like one of

+## the below lines.

+## Send all messages of level ‘warn’ or higher to @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/warnings

+#Log warn file @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/warnings.log

+## Send all debug and info messages to @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/debug

+#Log debug-info file @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/debug.log

+## Send all debug messages ONLY to @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/debug

+#Log debug-debug file @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/debug.log

+## To use the system log instead of Tor’s logfiles, uncomment these lines:

#Log notice syslog

-### To send all messages to stderr:

+## To send all messages to stderr:

#Log debug-err stderr

 

-# Uncomment this to start the process in the background… or use

-# –runasdaemon 1 on the command line.

+## Uncomment this to start the process in the background… or use

+## –runasdaemon 1 on the command line.

#RunAsDaemon 1

 

-# Tor only trusts directories signed with one of these keys, and

-# uses the given addresses to connect to the trusted directory

-# servers. If no DirServer lines are specified, Tor uses the built-in

-# defaults (moria1, moria2, tor26), so you can leave this alone unless

-# you need to change it.

+## Tor only trusts directories signed with one of these keys, and

+## uses the given addresses to connect to the trusted directory

+## servers. If no DirServer lines are specified, Tor uses the built-in

+## defaults (moria1, moria2, tor26), so you can leave this alone unless

+## you need to change it.

#DirServer 18.244.0.188:9031 FFCB 46DB 1339 DA84 674C 70D7 CB58 6434 C437 0441

#DirServer 18.244.0.114:80 719B E45D E224 B607 C537 07D0 E214 3E2D 423E 74CF

#DirServer 62.116.124.106:9030 847B 1F85 0344 D787 6491 A548 92F9 0493 4E4E B85D

 

-# The directory for keeping all the keys/etc. By default, we store

-# things in $HOME/.tor on Unix, and in Application Data\tor on Windows.

+## The directory for keeping all the keys/etc. By default, we store

+## things in $HOME/.tor on Unix, and in Application Data\tor on Windows.

#DataDirectory @LOCALSTATEDIR@/lib/tor

 

##################### Below is just for servers #####################

 

-## NOTE: If you enable these, you should consider mailing your

-## identity key fingerprint to the tor-ops, so we can verify

-## your configuration. See the README for details.

+## NOTE: If you enable these, you should consider mailing your identity

+## key fingerprint to the tor-ops, so we can add you to the list of

+## servers that clients will trust. See the README for details.

+

+## A unique handle for this server

+#Nickname ididnteditheconfig

+

+## The IP or fqdn for this server. Leave blank and Tor will guess.

+#Address noname.example.com

 

-#Nickname ididnteditheconfig       # A unique handle for this server

-#Address noname.example.com        # The IP or fqdn for this server

#ContactInfo 1234D/FFFFFFFF Random Person <nobody@example.com>

 

#ORPort 9001 # what port to advertise for tor connections

-# If you want to listen on a port other than the one advertised

-# in ORPort, uncomment the line below. You’ll need to do ipchains

-# or other port forwarding yourself to make this work.

+## If you want to listen on a port other than the one advertised

+## in ORPort, uncomment the line below. You’ll need to do ipchains

+## or other port forwarding yourself to make this work.

#ORBindAddress 0.0.0.0:9090

-# Uncomment this to mirror the directory for others (please do)

+## Uncomment this to mirror the directory for others (please do)

#DirPort 9030 # what port to advertise for directory connections

-# If you want to listen on a port other than the one advertised

-# in DirPort, uncomment the line below. You’ll need to do ipchains

-# or other port forwarding yourself to make this work.

+## If you want to listen on a port other than the one advertised

+## in DirPort, uncomment the line below. You’ll need to do ipchains

+## or other port forwarding yourself to make this work.

#DirBindAddress 0.0.0.0:9091

## A comma-separated list of exit policies. They’re considered first

File 4

############### This section is just for location-hidden services ###
64
65 ## Look in …/hidden_service/hostname for the address to tell people.
66 ## HiddenServicePort x y:z says to redirect a port x request from the
67 ## client to y:z.
68
69 #HiddenServiceDir /data/Data/projekte/DilloTor/tor-0.1.1.23/binary/var/lib/tor/hidden_service/
70 #HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80
71
72 #HiddenServiceDir /data/Data/projekte/DilloTor/tor-0.1.1.23/binary/var/lib/tor/other_hidden_service/
73 #HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80
74 #HiddenServicePort 22 127.0.0.1:22
75 #HiddenServiceNodes moria1,moria2
76 #HiddenServiceExcludeNodes bad,otherbad
77

File 5

— src/config/torrc.sample.in.orig 2007-01-27 23:41:23.000000000 +0000
+++ src/config/torrc.sample.in 2007-01-27 23:43:47.000000000 +0000
@@ -18,6 +18,11 @@
 ## With the default Mac OS X installer, Tor will look in ~/.tor/torrc or
 ## /Library/Tor/torrc
+## Default username and group the server will run as
+User tor
+Group tor
+
+PIDFile /var/run/tor/tor.pid
 ## Replace this with “SocksPort 0″ if you plan to run Tor only as a
 ## server, and not make any local application connections yourself.
@@ -46,6 +51,7 @@
 #Log notice syslog
 ## To send all messages to stderr:
 #Log debug stderr
+Log notice file /var/log/tor/tor.log
 ## Uncomment this to start the process in the background… or use
 ## –runasdaemon 1 on the command line. This is ignored on Windows;
@@ -55,6 +61,7 @@
 ## The directory for keeping all the keys/etc. By default, we store
 ## things in $HOME/.tor on Unix, and in Application Data\tor on Windows.
 #DataDirectory @LOCALSTATEDIR@/lib/tor
+DataDirectory   /var/lib/tor/data
 ## The port on which Tor will listen for local connections from Tor
 ## controller applications, as documented in control-spec.txt.

 

— a/src/config/torrc.sample.in
2 +++ b/src/config/torrc.sample.in
3 @@ -44,11 +44,11 @@ SocksListenAddress 127.0.0.1 # accept co
4  ## Uncomment this to start the process in the background… or use
5  ## –runasdaemon 1 on the command line. This is ignored on Windows;
6  ## see the FAQ entry if you want Tor to run as an NT service.
7 -#RunAsDaemon 1
8 +RunAsDaemon 1
9
10  ## The directory for keeping all the keys/etc. By default, we store
11  ## things in $HOME/.tor on Unix, and in Application Data\tor on Windows.
12 -#DataDirectory @LOCALSTATEDIR@/lib/tor
13 +DataDirectory @LOCALSTATEDIR@/lib/tor
14
15  ## The port on which Tor will listen for local connections from Tor
16  ## controller applications, as documented in control-spec.txt.
17 @@ -168,3 +168,5 @@ SocksListenAddress 127.0.0.1 # accept co
18  #BridgeRelay 1
19  #ExitPolicy reject *:*
20
21 +User tor
22 +PidFile @LOCALSTATEDIR@/run/tor/tor.pid

File 6

Configuration tips

Using the same exit for persistant connections

Some websites will log you out if you re-visit (while loggined in using a cookie to identify you) from a different IP. Tor has a feature called long lived ports. You could add the following to torrc to make connections to given ports use the same circut for a long period of time:

LongLivedPorts 80,23,21,22,706,1863,5050,5190,5222,5223,6667,8300,8888

A good alternative to LongLivedPorts is to use MapAddress for given sites. It allows you to make sure every connection to a given site goes through the same connection. This is also a good option if you need given sites to be visited from a given country.

For example,

MapAddress www.nsa.gov www.nsa.gov.nadia.exit

will make all visits to www.nsa.gov always use the edit node nadia, which is located in the US. There are anonymity issues with this; if you’re the only one using it then www.nsa.gov can at least figure out that it’s the same guy who’s visiting when connections are coming from that exit node.

=== Make Tor act faster ====

It is also possible to make Tor connections seem faster by setting CircuitBuildTimeout. Setting this number lower than the default (60 seconds) makes Tor give up and try other paths if it takes longer than the limit to build a circut. A circut which takes 50 seconds to build will be slower than a circut that takes 15 seconds to build. For example, you could set:

CircuitBuildTimeout 10

However, it must be mentioned that you will be using a whole lot more different servers if you allow circuts who take 50 seconds to build than if you set the limit to 10 seconds. There isn’t much solid research on exactly how this impacts traffic analysis resistance, but you’re – generally speaking – better off using a lot of slow servers than a few fast ones.

File 7

https://svn.torproject.org/svn/tor/tags/tor-0_0_9_5/src/config/torrc.sample.in

08/31/12

p2p Bot-net architecture in Tor -unstoppable

gAtO been doing some research in botnets and found out some cool things. The basics IRC- http – p2p and twitter botnets architecture and bots are becoming easier to find and use, tutorials and videos are all over the place and in any language. So the task of becoming a bot-master is easy.  Bot’s can be used for good also but nobody want’s to hear about that…Imagine bot’s being used with Amber alerts to or other emergencies tools were thousands of computers are needed, bot’s can be used for good things too.

Botnets are a big problem they allow anyone to have thousand, millions  of computers at their beck and call, a kid in a basement, or an enemy of the state these bot’s are a real danger. These bot’s have 4 different attack vector: 

Kenetic – Distribution – Information – cyberTools 

kinetic -zombie computer are used to Ddos attack a site or Click-fraud advertisement scams.

distributors – sending spam email- (Adware/ Spyware) – infecting other computers – co-workers, friends and families

information Keylogger, data exfiltration, key stealing from games -for sale $$ – email, social network — friends — banking – payPal – Work -Corporate spying and IP (intellectual property) plus emails of co-workers, friends and family.

cyberTools – we see bot’s become DNS servers, c&c servers, infection distribution servers, proxies, Tor (exit/entry) nodes or just a ftp site for storage.

I have seen lot’s of different bot’s but only four (4) basic types of botnet Command and Control (C&C) architecture: IRC (Internet Relay Chat) based, HTTP (or Web) based and P2P (Peer-to-peer) based – and Now Twitter controlled botnet’s.

Todays bot’s can be used in Intelligence Gathering, Monitoring and surveillance with the ability to turn on WebCam and Microphone without the victim knowing and recording it makes them even more dangerous and any digital cell device is hackable.

Here is a new one for me a private Twitter account is being used as the (C&C) command and control for bots. Once the bots are installed in the machine they go out and friend their botMaster they accept the friend and now send coded messages that are the commands for the bot’s. This is pretty cool and since it’s Twitter is kinda normal communication tool even in business machines, groups use twitter all the time to communicate.

In my research I found bots and video, tutorials and everything I need. On top of that we have Tor and other anonymized (custom Tor network) for these bot’s to communicate untraceable and cannot be found.

Here is were the metal hit’s the road because in this environment the p2p Botnet Architecture used with Tor would be an unstoppable solution and it’s becoming reality today: I included a thread from a hacker site in Tor discussing this very subject //.

these are some of the bot’s I found free source code to play -

G-Bot 1.7 Ddos-Bot – Zues 2.0.8.9 – ClientMesh 4.0 – DarkComet 5.3.1 – BlackShades 4.8 – SpyEye 1.3.45

Below are some of my notes on this I hope they may help - gAtO oUt 

botnet basics

There are basically 3 types of Bot net technologies. The first botnets started back about a decade ago with IRC bots

it’s more a continual connection at all times

IRC – HTTP – P2P – note p2p is the best meshed no central C&C

With HTTP botnets you can communicate async – things can be schedule a meeting and then log of and do the work then at a pre arrange time you call home (C&C) and check in with mamma.

Then you have p2p botnet’s they have no central C&C so are much harder to find the source and kill it.

Here we see were some of the bot’s may become proxies or some units may be used to cascade out spam interactions, one may also become a download location, one a dns server. The key thing to take away from a Peer to Peer networks is it’s very difficult to take them down because of their mesh network. There is no central point of failure, it’’s a simple file sharing protocol

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=  p2p Tor Bot -message hacking board in Tor-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

http://clsvtzwzdgzkjda7.onion/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=7657

Hey guys, just thought I would leave a thread here to announce a new bot that I am working on at the moment, Kronos.

Kronos is an http bot that runs through tor, each bot will launch its own tor process and then connect to your panel (which is a hidden service) using tor.

Current Features

  • The bot will act as a hidden service on the tor network
  • Socks5 proxy. Because of the above feature you are able to connect to the bot and use it as a proxy through tor, this removes the need for the bot to use upnp to open a port for you to connect through as tor handles NAT traversal by having the server connect out to the network itself, meaning there are no incoming connections. You can read here for more if you don’t already know how this works https://www.torproject.org/docs/hidden-services.html.en
  • Torrent seeder, not a shitty seeder that adds torrent files to the users torrent client, bots will work as real torrent clients.
  • Various flooding abilities (useless in my opinion)
  • Form grabber
  • Possibly mailing capabilities

I am also playing with some p2p code

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-hacking board in Tor=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

// So now that we know a bit about botnets let’s look at how they can make a profit for the criminal, below I listed of some of the stuff that you can harvest from your botnet empire.

Revenue Generated

Spam

Adware/ Spyware Scare-ware

Crimeware – Keylogger, data exfiltration, key stealing from games -for sale $$ – email, social network — friends — banking – payPal – Work -Corporate spying and IP plus emails of friends and work buddies..

Clickfraud

Phishing

Proxies

Ddos

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RsDtlqT4Zd4 Zeus BotNet Tutorial 2012

 http://www.xylibox.com/2011/08/cracking-spyeye-13x.html  SpyEye Tutorial 2011