Kaspersky Labs, a leading information security software developer, presents the annual review of malicious programs. The material below contains information about major virus outbreaks which occurred in 2003, expert opinion about malicious program trends and Kaspersky Labs forecasts for the...
Kaspersky Lab, a leading information security software developer, presents the annual review of malicious programs. The material below contains information about major virus outbreaks which occurred in 2003, expert opinion about malicious program trends and Kaspersky Lab forecasts for the future. Introduction 9 major virus outbreaks were registered in 2003, and 26 less significant ones, which were mainly of a local nature. This figure is lower than that of 2002, when there were 12 major outbreaks and 34 minor incidents. However, even though the number of outbreaks has decreased, their scale and the impact they have on the Internet has increased significantly. Major virus outbreaks There were two global outbreaks in 2003, which were the biggest in the history of the Internet. It should be noted that these outbreaks were not caused by classic email worms, but by worms modified for the Internet which spread as network data packets. The foundations of the first outbreak were laid on the 25th January by the Internet worm Slammer (Helkern), which used a vulnerability in the Microsoft SQL Server in order to replicate. Slammer became the first fileless Internet worm which fully demonstrated the capabilities of flashworms, first described in 2001. On 25th January 2003, in a matter of mere minutes, the worm infected millions of computers throughout the world, and increased network traffic by between 40% and 80% (estimates vary), causing national backbone servers to crash. The worm attacked through port 1434; on penetration it did not replicate itself on the disk, but simply remained in the memory of the infected machine. An analysis of the outbreak shows that the worm probably originated from East Asia. The second outbreak, which was no less damaging than the first, was started on the 12th August by Lovesan (Blaster). Lovesan clearly demonstrated to the entire world just how vulnerable the popular operating system Windows is. Lovesan used a Windows security breach to propagate. However, in contrast to Slammer, Lovesan used a breach in the RPC DCOM service, which is present on every computer working under Windows 2000/XP. This meant that the majority of Internet users that day was exposed to the worm. Only a few days after the worm first appeared, three other versions of Lovesan were detected. Then the Welchia worm, which used the same Windows breach, exploded onto the Internet. However, Welchia differed from the original worm. It deleted copies of Lovesan on infected computers, and attempted to install a patch for the RPC DCOM service. 2003 was the year of ceaseless email worm outbreaks. Ganda and Avron were detected in January. The former was written in Sweden, and is still one of the most wide-spread email worms in Scandinavia. The author was arrested by the Swedish police at the end of March. Avron was the first worm written in Kazakhstan to cause a global outbreak. The source code of the worm was published on virus web sites, which led to the creation of several less successful versions of the worm. January also saw the appearance of the first worm in the Sobig family, which caused regular outbreaks. Version Sobig.f broke all records, becoming the most widespread email worm in the history of the Internet. At the peak of the outbreak in August, Sobig.f could be found in every 20th email message. This particular piece of malicious program was especially dangerous: one of the aims of the authors of the Sobig family was to create an infected network of computers in order to carry out distributed DoS attacks on random web sites. The infected network of computers was also intended to act as a proxy servers for distributing spam. The email worm Tanatos.b was another notable piece of malicious program which appeared in 2003. The first version of Tanatos (Bugbear) was written in mid 2002, with the second version appearing nearly a year later. The worm used a breach long known about in the Miscosoft Outlook security system (the IFRAME breach) to automatically launch itself from infected messages. The latest worms in the Lentin (Yaha) family continued to appear. According to current data they were all created in India by one of the local hacker groups in the course of a virtual war being conducted between Indian and Pakistani hackers. The most widespread were versions M and O, where the virus replicated in the form of a ZIP archive attached to infected messages. Virus writers from Eastern Europe were also active in 2003. The second worm from the former USSR to cause a global outbreak was Mimail. The worm used a vulnerability in Internet Explorer to replicate itself, and the vulnerability became known as Mimail-based. The vulnerability allowed the extraction and execution of binary code from an HTML file and was first exploited in Russia in May 2003 by Trojan.Win32.StartPage.L. Following this, the vulnerability was used by the Mimail family of worms and a number of Trojan programs. The author of Mimail published the source code on the Internet, giving rise to several new versions by virus writers from other countries, including the USA and France. September 2003 was the month of the Internet worm Swen. Swen disguised itself as a Microsoft patch, infected hundreds of thousands of computers throughout the world, and to this day remains one of the most widespread email worms. The virus author was able to successfully exploit the fact that users were already unsettled by the recent Lovesan and Sobig.f incidents and were therefore likely to instantly install the so-called patch. There were two other major security events which should be mentioned. The first of these was caused by Sober, a relatively simple email worm written by a German in imitation of the leader of the year, Sobig.f. The second of these was the backdoor Trojan Afcore: in spite of the fact that it did not spread widely, it is worth a certain amount of attention due to the interesting way it conceals itself in a system, by writing its code to alternate data streams of the NTFS file system. Even more interesting, Afcore does not use the alternate data streams of files but of directories. The Top Ten Viruses In 2003*
Ranking | Name | Percentage |
---|---|---|
1 | 18,25% | |
2 | 16,84% | |
3 | 11,01% | |
4 | 8,46% | |
5 | 2,72% | |
6 | 2,14% | |
7 | 2,02% | |
8 | 1,45% | |
9 | I-Worm.Hybris | 1,12% |
10 | I-Worm.Roron | 1,01% |
*data from email traffic monitoring Types of malicious programs Throughout the year worms remained the dominant type of malicious programs. Viruses rank second, thanks to the activity of the macro viruses Macro.Word97.Thus and Macro.Word.Saver. However, in the autumn of 2003 Trojan programs overtook viruses, and this trend still continues.

