A server housing tens of thousands of stolen Facebook
credentials was discovered--and it turns out the attackers employed
a new version of an existing worm to pilfer the goods.
Researchers at Seculert say the attackers used a new variant of
the Ramnit worm, which is best known as a financial malware family
that steals FTP credentials and most recently morphed into a
Zeus-like weapon that performs HTML code injection into browsers to
steal online banking credentials. Ramnit represents some 17 percent
of all new malware infections, according to Symantec data.
Ramnit is known for its ability to spread quickly and on a large
scale. "This is a variant which expands the financial-stealing of
the previous version and now steals Facebook login credentials,"
said Aviv Raff, CTO at Seculert. "We suspect they are using the
login credentials to increase the spread of Ramnit. The malware by
itself is a worm--or a file infector--and this feature adds to this
worm capability."
Seculert employed a sinkhole to gather data on Ramnit's activity
and found that the attackers had stolen more than 45,000 Facebook
credentials from all over the world, but mainly from users in the
United Kingdom and France. Even more alarming is that the attackers
appear to be using duplicate passwords to hack victims' corporate
accounts and, thus, their employers. Seculert has handed the
information over to Facebook.
"The cybercriminals are also taking advantage of the fact that
people usually use the same passwords for different Web-based
services (Facebook, Gmail, corporate SSL VPN, Outlook Web Access,
etc.), to gain remote access to corporate networks," according to
Seculert's blog posting on the find.
"Cybercriminals are abusing the stolen credentials to try and
access victims' corporate networks," Raff says. "We see that happen
a lot."
Attackers are retooling malware families to target social
networks as an alternative to e-mail spam.
"Ramnit is a reflection of a shift that has been ongoing in the
malware domain for some time,” says Michael Sutton, vice
president of security research at Zscaler ThreatLabZ. "Ramnit was
not initially designed to harvest Facebook credentials, but the
Ramnit maintainers have recognized the value of Facebook accounts
for propagation. Whereas email can be easily spoofed and is
therefore more likely to be ignored, receiving communication from a
trusted contact on Facebook will have much higher click-through
rates. Victims are simply not aware that the 'trusted' Facebook
account from which the communication was received may itself have
already been compromised."
Facebook is well-aware of this trend, but is limited in stopping
these attacks, according to Sutton: "This is indicative of what
we're seeing at Facebook overall -- the site is not generally being
used to host malware as Facebook is fortunately doing a decent job
of preventing such attacks, but it has so far been playing a losing
game when it comes to preventing the social network from being used
as a catalyst to promote attacks."
Source:
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