Posts Tagged ‘Pushdo’

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Spam Volumes Drop After Spamit Shakeup

By Phil Hay  •  October 14th, 2010  •   Spam

The last few weeks has seen quite a shakeup in the spamming world.  Our Spam Volume Index, which records relative movements in spam volume sent to a bundle of domains we monitor, has recorded a substantial drop two weeks in a row.

M86 Security Spam Volume Index

A major cause of the drop was a sudden drop in spam output from Rustock, one of the major spamming botnets of recent times.  We noticed the decline starting around 20 September and dropping to negligible levels by 23 September.  This happened at the same time as initial reports surfaced that the notorious SpamIt.com operation was shutting down.

Rustock Spam Volume Decline

Spamit.com is underground group of email spam affiliates closely linked to GlavMed, which in turn is responsible for one of the largest and oldest affiliate programs called “Canadian Pharmacy”. In recent times Canadian Pharmacy has been the dominant spammed program, simultaneously spammed by most of the major spamming botnets.  In late September, the SpamIt.com domain had the following message announcing its impending shutdown on 10 October.

SpamIt.com web page prior to 10 October

Today, the SpamIt.com domain has the following page, which translated, reads “10.10.10 The King is dead! Long live the king!”

SpamIt.com: "The King is Dead. Long Live the King!"

Rustock, in particular, has had a long history of association with the Canadian Pharmacy program. In fact, for much of its life that we have observed, its spam output has been mostly or solely Canadian Pharmacy spam.  The Rustock botnet itself has not gone away. Its control servers are still up, we have observed Rustock spamming in our lab, and some of our customers are still experiencing a low level of Rustock spam hitting their servers.

So what of the other botnets? There has been some suggestion that we may have confused Rustock spam with Pushdo.  Not so. We observe these bots closely in our lab and know their traits, habits and templates well. The following chart shows Pushdo’s spam output over the same time frame.

Pushdo's ouput dips, gains and dips again

In the chart above we can see the big dip following the disruption to Pushdo’s control servers in late August.  But inevitably Pushdo’s output recovered as it added new control servers.  We observed another big dip on 3rd October, in line with other observers.  At this stage we are unsure whether this latest dip is related to the SpamIt.com closure. Researchers are taking a close interest in Pushdo and there may well be other factors impacting on it (for instance see here).

Even more recently, since the weekend, the Grum botnet, another major spammer has also gone very quiet. Here is a chart from the same period, that shows a marked drop in spam output after 8 October, very close to the 10 October “official” SpamIt.com closure.

Grum's output dips after 8 October

So, what to make of all this?  It seems that the SpamIt.com closure has had a major impact on the volume of spam output, as some botnet operators/spammers have lost one of their major affiliate programs, or in other words, sources of cash. How long it will last is another question entirely. There are competing affiliate programs for botnet operators to sign up for.  We have  noticed that one of the smaller botnets, Xarvester, who we have previously linked to Spamit.com has already swapped from Canadian Pharmacy to Ultimate Replicas.  And it may well be that SpamIt.com and Canadian Pharmacy have gone into hiding, and after a brief hiatus, will reemerge in another guise.  Only time will tell.  In the meantime we are not complaining.

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Cutwail’s Spam Cocktail

By Rodel Mendrez  •  September 21st, 2010  •   Spam

Since June of this year when we first saw a FIFA World Cup 2010 spam campaign, we have regularly observed spam campaigns where an HTML attachment contains obfuscated JavaScript redirect code.

The Pushdo botnet’s spamming component, Cutwail, has been the culprit behind these types of malicious campaigns. Many different themes and subject lines have been used, such as the following:

America’s Got Talent
Apartment for rent
Shipping Notifications
Labels and such
Invoice for Floor Replacement
Delivery Status Notification (Failure)
Welcome Letter
NFL Picks Week 2

and other random subjects including this one that uses celebrity names:

Figure 1. Cutwail spam campaign sample

The attached HTML source code is an obfuscated JavaScript, and the snippet of code below is just one of the many variations:

Figure 2. Obfuscated JavaScript code

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Pushdo Botnet Crippled – II

By Phil Hay  •  September 9th, 2010  •   Botnets

Two weeks ago we reported on the sudden drop in spam from the Pushdo botnet as a result of many of its control servers being taken down.  Since then, spam output from this botnet has remained subdued, as the following updated chart shows.

As Pushdo (otherwise known by its spamming component Cutwail) was only responsible for about 10% of spam prior to the takedown, overall spam volumes have not been hugely affected.  It is not uncommon to see 10% volume swings in a day.  Having said that, last week our spam volume index did show slightly reduced overall levels of spam for the week.

Things seem to be warming up, however.  Other researchers have observed more Cutwail control servers being added. Also,  yesterday we saw a resumption of malicious spam from Pushdo with the Sasfis downloader as the payload.  This simply reaffirms our earlier suspicions that these guys will not be down for long.

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Malicious Spam on the Increase

By Phil Hay  •  August 17th, 2010  •   Spam

If you thought that malware propagation through email was a dying art, or that spam is fairly harmless, think again.  We are currently seeing increased levels of spam-borne malware.  Our figures over the last three months show an increasing trend in the proportion of malicious spam.  In the week ending 8 August, this figure spiked to over 6% of spam, or in other words, 6 out of every 100 spam messages.

So what are the underlying reasons for all this activity?

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Pushdo uses World Cup Theme to Spread Malware

By Gavin Neale  •  June 15th, 2010  •   Malware

Over the last couple of days we have been seeing numerous malicious and Canadian Pharmacy spam campaigns sent from the Pushdo botnet. This campaign features an HTML file as an attachment and some subject lines, including one that mentions the FIFA World Cup, that may fool unwary recipients. Some of the email subjects we have seen are:

FIFA World Cup South Africa… bad news

[Recipient Domain] account Information

[Random Email Address] has sent you a birthday ecard.

Reset your Twitter password

The HTML file attachment contains the following JavaScript:

We have seen several different variations of this script but all have the same purpose which is concealed by some very basic obfuscation. If we remove the parts of this script that aren’t doing anything and clean up some of the text we get the script below:

If this attachment was opened in a browser with JavaScript enabled then the script will redirect the browser to the file z.htm (shown below) on one of several different web servers.

This page waits for three seconds and then redirects the browser to a Canadian Pharmacy website. While waiting, a hidden IFrame is loaded. We have removed some of the obfuscation to make the script in this IFrame more readable:

This script checks each of the browser’s plugins to see if any contain the words ‘Adobe Acrobat’ or ‘Adobe PDF’ in their name. This is looking for any Adobe PDF readers and if one is found, adds an IFrame to the page pointing to a malicious PDF file.

The script then checks if Java (Thats Sun Microsystem’s Java, not JavaScript) is enabled, and if so, adds an IFrame that exploits vulnerabilities in Java.

The exploits install an executable named game.exe which we have not yet analyzed and is not detected by many anti virus products.

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