http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/11/21/vxer_idea_drought/
By John Leyden
21st November 2006
Virus writers have run out of fresh ideas for the creation of malware,
according to a study by Russian anti-virus firm Kaspersky Lab.
Kaspersky reckons that while the hacking community is developing "proof
of concept" code for new platforms, it is unlikely that this work will
result in malware capable of causing much damage.
"The overwhelming trends throughout 2006 indicate that the well of truly
new ideas has run dry. Virus writers are feverishly trying to defend
their creations against new protective technologies by creating proof of
concept code for new platforms.
"However, these creations do not yet have a footing in reality: we are
not seeing threats that would be able to cause millions and millions of
pounds of damage, as Klez, Mydoom, Lovesan [the Love Bug] and Sasser did
in the past," said Alex Gostev, senior virus analyst at Kaspersky Lab
and author of its report Malware Evolution: July - September 2006 [1].
Gostev reckons virus writers are suffering from a form of writer's block
that means malware authors - much like Hollywood production studios -
are churning out a string of uninteresting sequels devoid of fresh
ideas.
"Threats are no longer global and are not effective for as long as they
used to be. There's nothing really new taking place. It's the same
unending stream of Trojans, viruses, and worms - the only difference is
that the numbers have significantly increased," Gostev said.
Kaspersky reckons the battle between VXers and security firms has
reached a stalemate. Although anti-virus firms have taken steps to speed
their reaction time and improve heuristic technologies capable of
identifying malware strains without fresh signature updates, the bad
guys have learned to live with faster reaction times or else
concentrated their efforts on users who fail to deploy adequate security
protection. Gostev thinks the present impass is unsustainable and either
VXers or the anti-virus community will gain the ascendancy over coming
months.
The report also looks at key malware trends over the period between July
and September 2006. Over the period, virus writers concentrated their
efforts on a variety of Microsoft Office vulns that became exposed,
often timing the release of malware with Microsoft's patch schedule to
maximise the potential for mischief. Chinese hackers have been
particular active in this area. Kaspersky advises Microsoft to brace
itself for another wave of attacks likely to accompany the release of
Office 2007 later this year.
One of the few significant advances by VXers over the period came with
the release of Mobler, a cross-platform virus capable of infecting both
Symbian and Windows systems. The proof-of-concept code failed to cause
much harm but might become a template for more dangerous attacks,
Kaspersky warns. Also of note on the mobile virus front was a new
version of Comwar, which used file infecting technologies as well as
traditional MMS and Bluetooth propagation methods in order to spread.
Kaspersky warns that a recent vulnerability in the Wi-Fi function of
Intel Centrino processors, discovered in August, might also lend itself
to exploitation by virus writers even though such a threat has failed to
materialise as yet.
[1] http://www.viruslist.com/en/analysis?pubid=204791907
Received on Wed Nov 22 01:03:54 2006