Heads up on a virus

Started by frailer, August 17, 2012, 05:56:05 PM

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frailer


....maybe. A mate on Guild guitar forum sent out emails from daughter's laptop, saying his is 'locked down' due to the Citadel Malware "Reveton." Wondering if anyone on Windows has encountered it. He is not stupid, and am sure he'd be running some sort of effective a/v.
Forgotten good guys: Dennis Ritchie, Burrell Smith, Bill Atkinson, Richard Stallman
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Now just an honorary member.

Joe

Reveton Malware Freezes PCs, Demands Payment

FBI warns of Reveton 'ransomware' scam that freezes Windows PCs, accuses you of a crime, and requests you pay fines to unlock computer.

By Mathew J. Schwartz      InformationWeek
August 15, 2012 10:35 AM


Has your Windows PC frozen up, displaying a lock screen with warnings from the FBI that the PC has been used to illegally access or distributed copyrighted material, or "prohibited pornographic content"?

If so, then you're likely dealing with "ransomware" known as Reveton, which freezes PCs and opens a window telling people that if they want to regain control, they'll need to pay a "fine" via a prepaid money card service. Helpfully, a "pay MoneyPak" code-entry box is even helpfully included on the lock screen. But unlocking a Reveton-infected PC can be difficult, owing to the malware often being deployed in conjunction with other malware that's designed to block users from accessing security websites.

The FBI last week issued a warning that the number of Reveton infections has recently been surging. "We're getting inundated with complaints," said Donna Gregory, a manager at the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), which is a joint effort between the FBI and the National White Collar Crime Center, in a statement. "Some people have actually paid the so-called fine," she said, noting that amounts of $200 aren't uncommon.

"Instructions were given on how to load the card and make the payment," one victim of the scam wrote in an emailed complaint to the IC3. "The page said if the demands were not met, criminal charges would be filed and my computer would remain locked on that screen."

Some versions of the scam pretend to be from the FBI, while others list the Department of Justice's Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section as being behind the freeze. Regardless, the warning notices are heavy on the legalese, accusing PC owners of everything from "violating Article 202 of the Criminal Code" to distributing child pornography. According to the FBI, some versions of Reveton even "turn on computer webcams and display the victim's picture on the frozen screen."

Most Reveton infections also seem to be the result of "drive-by viruses," said the FBI, referring to PCs being infected via known vulnerabilities when they visit a compromised website, rather than through phishing attacks or tricking users into opening malicious email attachments.

The Reveton ransomware is typically delivered via Citadel Trojan malware, according to the FBI's warning. Based on the Zeus malware, Citadel is an all-purpose crimeware kit designed for financial fraud, which debuted on Russian underground hacking websites in December 2011 and sells for $2,500, although plug-ins for adding additional capabilities, as well as a monthly malware-as-a-service update, cost extra.

Citadel's creators have seen rapid uptake of their malware, reportedly owing to high-quality customer service practices, such as frequent updates that add customer-requested capabilities. These include AES encryption to help hide communications between infected "zombie" PCs and its command-and-control server, capabilities for defeating botnet-tracking services, and blocks that stop infected PCs from visiting security vendors' websites or antivirus-signature updating sites.

But according to a July 2012 blog post from a fraud research group at security firm RSA, thanks to law enforcement pressure, Citadel's developer has announced that he's withdrawing the malware from the open--albeit underground--market. "It appears that soon enough only existing customers will continue to enjoy Citadel Trojan upgrades and those wishing to purchase a new kit from the outside will have to get a current customer to vouch for them or be denied the product altogether," according to RSA.

Not everyone, however, is buying the bureau's assertion that Citadel is being used to distribute Reveton. According to security journalist Brian Krebs, a team of Reveton-tracking researchers instead suspects that scammers are using exploit toolkits such as BlackHole to infect PCs with both types of malware.
Mac OS Sonoma 14.2.1 (c) | (retired)

The seven ages of man: spills, drills, thrills, bills, ills, pills and wills.

frailer

Forgotten good guys: Dennis Ritchie, Burrell Smith, Bill Atkinson, Richard Stallman
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Now just an honorary member.

Joe

Mac OS Sonoma 14.2.1 (c) | (retired)

The seven ages of man: spills, drills, thrills, bills, ills, pills and wills.

frailer


QuoteAccording to the FBI, some versions of Reveton even "turn on computer webcams and display the victim's picture on the frozen screen."

Sneaky, malicious mongrels, pretty much. But all about $$, ultimately.
Forgotten good guys: Dennis Ritchie, Burrell Smith, Bill Atkinson, Richard Stallman
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Now just an honorary member.

Joe

Quote from: frailer on August 18, 2012, 02:15:09 AM
QuoteAccording to the FBI, some versions of Reveton even "turn on computer webcams and display the victim's picture on the frozen screen."

Sneaky, malicious mongrels, pretty much. But all about $$, ultimately.

I'm still amazed people fall for these scams but they must be or they wouldn't keep doing them.
Mac OS Sonoma 14.2.1 (c) | (retired)

The seven ages of man: spills, drills, thrills, bills, ills, pills and wills.

Farabomb

The boss's laptop got nailed with a version of that. It was a Java hole that it used for the exploit iirc and since nobody here thinks updating is a good idea it took it down hard. Even more malicious is some of them not only lock you out, it encrypts all your files too. Good luck cracking it, you need a few supercomputers and a lot of time. I was sitting at the laptop when it went down so I immediately unplugged the network and tried to see where I could get with it. Answer is nowhere, I replaced the drive and got the laptop back up and running. I still have the drive and luckily the files aren't encrypted but I still don't trust the drive.
Speed doesn't kill, rapidly becoming stationary is the problem

I'd rather have stories told than be telling stories of what I could have done.

Quote from: Ear on April 06, 2016, 11:54:16 AM
Quote from: Farabomb on April 06, 2016, 11:39:41 AMIt's more like grip, grip, grip, noise, then spin and 2 feet in and feel shame.
I once knew a plus-sized girl and this pretty much describes teh secks. :rotf:
They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
         â€”Benjamin Franklin

My other job

Joe

Quote from: Farabomb on August 20, 2012, 07:37:04 AMThe boss's laptop got nailed with a version of that. It was a Java hole that it used for the exploit iirc and since nobody here thinks updating is a good idea it took it down hard. Even more malicious is some of them not only lock you out, it encrypts all your files too. Good luck cracking it, you need a few supercomputers and a lot of time. I was sitting at the laptop when it went down so I immediately unplugged the network and tried to see where I could get with it. Answer is nowhere, I replaced the drive and got the laptop back up and running. I still have the drive and luckily the files aren't encrypted but I still don't trust the drive.

Put it in a Mac and zero it out. Should be OK after that.
Mac OS Sonoma 14.2.1 (c) | (retired)

The seven ages of man: spills, drills, thrills, bills, ills, pills and wills.

Farabomb

I've been using the Mac for all virus issues. Figured it wouldn't cross pollinate. I'm going to pull all the files off the drive just in case he needs them down the road then fully wipe the drive.
Speed doesn't kill, rapidly becoming stationary is the problem

I'd rather have stories told than be telling stories of what I could have done.

Quote from: Ear on April 06, 2016, 11:54:16 AM
Quote from: Farabomb on April 06, 2016, 11:39:41 AMIt's more like grip, grip, grip, noise, then spin and 2 feet in and feel shame.
I once knew a plus-sized girl and this pretty much describes teh secks. :rotf:
They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
         â€”Benjamin Franklin

My other job