Most Recent News from the Lab
 

Friday, May 17, 2013

 
BBC News: LulzSec Hacker Interview Posted by Sean @ 12:54 GMT

BBC News has a 13 minute report that's worth a view.

LulzSec hacker: Internet is a world devoid of empathy

LulzSec hacker: 'Internet is a world devoid of empathy'

 
 

 
 
Thursday, May 16, 2013

 
LulzSec Sentencing in UK Posted by Mikko @ 13:32 GMT

LulzSec Twitter

LulzSec – the rockband of hacker groups – had three of their six members sentenced today in London.

LulzSec made headlines during their "50 days of Lulz" in May-June 2011, during which they attacked Fox, PBS, Sony, Nintendo, Sega, Minecraft, Infragard, NHS, US Senate, SOCA and CIA. They also recorded and published a conference call between US and European law enforcement officials, discussing police tactics against LulzSec.

LulzSec was different from most other attackers, as they weren't doing their attacks to make money or to protest. They did it for Teh Lulz. Also, they had no sense of self-preservation, which led to taking them down.

LulzSec had 6 core members:


The first three were sentenced today.

  • Jake Davis got a 24 month sentence. He will serve 12 months in a young offenders institute
  • Mustafa Al-Bassam got a 20 month sentence, suspended for two years and 300 hours of community work.
  • Ryan Ackroyd got a 30 month sentence. He will serve 15 months.

A botnet master associated with Lulzsec was sentenced at the same time: Ryan Cleary (aka Viral). He got a 32 month sentence. He will serve 16 months.

Sabu was arrested in June 2011. He pleaded guilty and has been working with FBI since. He's yet to be sentenced.

Darren Martyn was indicted in March 2012. He's yet to be sentenced.

So, five of the LulzSec six has been caught. The remaining mystery is the 6th member: Avunit.

Who was Avunit? How come none of the other members have given him up?

We have no idea who Avunit is. We have no identity. We don't even know which continent he is from.

P.S. Obligatory nyan.cat.







 
 

 
 
Mac Spyware Found at Oslo Freedom Forum Posted by Sean @ 12:29 GMT

The Oslo Freedom Forum is an annual event "exploring how best to challenge authoritarianism and promote free and open societies." This year's conference (which took place May 13-15) had a workshop for freedom of speech activists on how to secure their devices against government monitoring. During the workshop, Jacob Appelbaum actually discovered a new and previously unknown backdoor on an African activist's Mac.

Our Mac analyst (Brod) is currently investigating the sample.

It's signed with an Apple Developer ID.

Developer ID

The launch point:

Launch point

It dumps screenshots into a folder called MacApp:

Screenshot dump folder

Functions:

Functions

There are two C&C servers related to this sample:

DomainTools, securitytable.org
securitytable.org

DomainTools, docforum.info
docsforum.info

One C&C doesn't currently resolve, and the other:

docsforum.info
Forbidden

Our detection is called: Backdoor: OSX/KitM.A. (SHA1: 4395a2da164e09721700815ea3f816cddb9d676e)

 
 

 
 
Wednesday, May 15, 2013

 
Download: Mobile Threat Report Q1 2013 Posted by Sean @ 12:45 GMT

Our Mobile Threat Report Q1 2013 is now publicly available.

Mobile Threat Count, Q1 2013

All of our past reports are also available in the "Labs" section of f-secure.com.

 
 

 
 
Monday, May 13, 2013

 
Webinar: Embedded Posted by Sean @ 13:51 GMT

F-Secure Labs Webinar: Mobile Threat Report Q1 2013


 
 

 
 
Friday, May 10, 2013

 
Webinar: Monday, May 13th Posted by Sean @ 17:43 GMT

It's time to schedule another F-Secure Labs webinar!

We're trying out Google's "Hangouts On Air" this go-around:

Google Hangout Webinar, May13

Details: F-Secure Labs Threat Report Preview Webinar

Hope to see you there.

 
 

 
 
Tuesday, May 7, 2013

 
Twitter's Password Fails Posted by Sean @ 12:51 GMT

Let's say you want to hack Jack Dorsey's online banking account. Where to start? His username?

Challenging… his online banking username is a secret. But how about his Twitter account?

Oh, that's easy. It's @jack.

That's the problem with "social" usernames — they're meant to be known.

Twitter's Password Fails

Another problem, Twitter appears to validate e-mail addresses:

Twitter's Password Fails

Looks like nobody's home at jackd@twitter.com:

Twitter's Password Fails

Twitter's settings include an option to require "personal" infomation such as an e-mail or phone number:

Twitter's Password Fails

But that's less than useless if Twitter won't actually let you add your number:

Twitter's Password Fails

And just how "personal" is a phone number anyway?

Twitter's Password Fails

Two-factor authentication?

Sure.

But Twitter should first stop validating e-mail addresses.

And then maybe it could add an option to disallow logins via the publicly known username.

Edited to add: On second thought…

How about this?

Twitter should stop validating e-mailing addresses in its password reset form.

And then, discriminate between using e-mail and username. If an account is accessed with the usernamedon't provide access to the account settings! The e-mail address (alias) could then be used only by account "adminstrators".

Example: regular @AP staff could login with "AP" — no settings for them! They could Tweet, but would be restricted from making changes to the account. But the @AP "admin", some guy in the IT department, that person could login using the "secret" e-mail address and would be able to change account settings (and lockdown the account in case of a breach).

Discriminating between e-mail and username — a way to distinguish between "admins" and "users".

 
 

 
 
Friday, May 3, 2013

 
Online Activities Related to Elections in Malaysia Posted by SuGim @ 11:57 GMT

Malaysia's 2013 general elections are scheduled for Sunday, May 5, 2013. Political news coverage is currently inundating all news outlets, including social networking sites, as the country's political parties go into high gear in the final run-up to polling day.

The huge media interest creates an opportunity for malware writers to gain new victims using established social engineering techniques — and sure enough, this week Citizen Lab released a report indicating that a sample of the sophisticated FinFisher (a.k.a. FinSpy) surveillance malware was discovered in a document crafted specifically for this event.

The malware was distributed in a booby-trapped Malay-language Microsoft Word document named "SENARAI CADANGAN CALON PRU KE-13 MENGIKUT NEGERI.doc" (In English: "List of proposed candidates for 13th General Elections according to states").

SENARAI CADANGAN CALON PRU KE-13 MENGIKUT NEGERI.doc

The report speculates that the attack document is targeting Malaysians looking for more information related to one of the most closely contested elections in the country's history. F-Secure detects the document in question as Trojan:W32/FinSpy.D.

Finfisher is produced by an European company called the Gamma Group. As we mentioned in a previous post, the company was present at the ISS World 2011 gathering hosted in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The ISS event serves as a trade fair for surveillance software (attendance is by "invitation" or if you are a "telco service provider, government employees or law enforcement officer").

ISS World Kuala Lumpur

Additionally, there have been reports alleging that multiple news and social media sites, including YouTube, Facebook, and Malaysiakini (a popular Malaysian online news site) have been subjected to various forms of disruption, including defacements, denial of service attacks, and filtering.

F-Secure Labs is observing the situation. We saw a rise in malware detections during April 2013 in Malaysia. However, we don't really know if the increase was due to election-related activity or something else.

Malaysia, detections