Hackers find a new place to hide rootkits
Security researchers have developed a new type of malicious rootkit software
that hides itself in an obscure part of a computer's microprocessor, hidden
from current antivirus products.
Called a System Management Mode (SMM) rootkit, the software runs in a protected
part of a computer's memory that can be locked and rendered invisible to the
operating system, but which can give attackers a picture of what's happening
in a computer's memory.
The SMM rootkit comes with keylogging and communications software and could
be used to steal sensitive information from a victim's computer. It was built
by Shawn Embleton and Sherri Sparks, who run an Oviedo, Florida, security company
called Clear Hat Consulting.
The proof-of-concept software will be demonstrated publicly for the first time
at the Black
Hat security conference in Las Vegas this August.
The rootkits used by cyber crooks today are sneaky programs designed to cover
up their tracks while they run in order to avoid detection. Rootkits hit the
mainstream in late 2005 when Sony
BMG Music used rootkit techniques to hide its copy protection software.
The music company was ultimately forced to recall millions of CDs amid the ensuing
scandal.
In recent years, however, researchers have been looking at ways to run rootkits
outside of the operating system, where they are much harder to detect. For example,
two years ago researcher Joanna Rutkowska introduced a rootkit called Blue Pill,
which used AMD's chip-level
virtualization technology to hide itself. She
said the technology could eventually be used to create "100 percent
undetectable malware."
"Rootkits are going more and more toward the hardware," said Sparks,
who wrote another rootkit three years ago called Shadow Walker. "The deeper
into the system you go, the more power you have and the harder it is to detect
you."
Blue Pill took advantage of new virtualization technologies that are now being
added to microprocessors, but the SMM rootkit uses a feature that has been around
for much longer and can be found in many more machines. SMM dates back to Intel's
386 processors, where it was added as a way to help hardware vendors fix bugs
in their products using software. The technology is also used to help manage
the computer's power management, taking it into sleep mode, for example.
In many ways, an SMM rootkit, running in a locked part of memory, would be
more difficult to detect than Blue Pill, said John Heasman, director of research
with NGS Software,
a security consulting firm. "An SMM rootkit has major ramifications for
things like [antivirus software products]," he said. "They will be
blind to it."
Researchers have suspected for several years that malicious software could
be written to run in SMM. In 2006, researcher Loic Duflot demonstrated how SMM
malware would work. "Duflot wrote a small SMM handler that compromised
the security model of the OS," Embleton said. "We took the idea further
by writing a more complex SMM handler that incorporated rootkit-like techniques."
In addition to a debugger, Sparks and Embleton had to write driver code in
hard-to-use assembly language to make their rootkit work. "Debugging it
was the hardest thing," Sparks said.
Being divorced from the operating system makes the SMM rootkit stealthy, but
it also means that hackers have to write this driver code expressly for the
system they are attacking.
"I dont see it as a widespread threat, because it's very hardware-dependent,"
Sparks said. "You would see this in a targeted attack."
But will it be 100 percent undetectable? Sparks says no. "I'm not saying
it's undetectable, but I do think it would be difficult to detect." She
and Embleton will talk more about detection techniques during their Black Hat
session, she said.
Brand new rootkits don't come along every day, Heasman said. "It will
be one of the most interesting, if not the most interesting, at Black Hat this
year," he said.
IDG News Service
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