Shamoon Malware Might Be Flame Copycat

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Publicated : 22/11/2024   Category : security


Shamoon Malware Might Be Flame Copycat


August attack on Saudi energy company likely work of anti-tyranny hacktivist group Cutting Sword of Justice, probably a Flame copycat, say security experts.



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Malware known as Shamoon that targeted multiple energy companies and erased the hard drives of infected computers appears to have been designed not by a nation state for the purposes of cyber attacks or espionage, but rather by a band of activists protesting the commercialization of oil reserves in some Arab countries.
That revelation was announced Wednesday by Eugene Kaspersky, chairman and CEO of Kaspersky Lab, who noted that the stop time coded into the malware matched the time mentioned in a
Pastebin post
by the Cutting Sword of Justice group. We can confirm that #Shamoon kill-timer is the same (08:08 UTC) as announced in anons statement,
tweeted
Kaspersky.
According to the groups Pastebin post, the destruction operations began on Wednesday, Aug 15, 2012 at 11:08 AM (Local time in Saudi Arabia) and will be completed within a few hours. The Pastebin post was uploaded that same day.
According to a
blog entry
posted by Dmitry Tarakanov, a security researcher at Kaspersky Lab, he found that the Shamoon malware contains a timing feature that checks for the date mentioned in the Pastebin post, thus connecting Cutting Sword of Justice to the Shamoon malware. Shamoon, Simon in Arabic, was named after the string of a folder name within the malware executable,
according to Seculert
.
[ This now-granddaddy of hacktivist groups believes knowledge is free.
Who Is Anonymous: 10 Key Facts
. ]
Heres where the date check comes into play: While the Shamoon malware dropper, or installer, is working through its infection routine, it checks to see whether the hardcoded date--noted above--has arrived or not. If the date has passed, the malware proceeds to the final stage of its infection, which involves destroying data and overwriting the PCs master boot record, thus making the machine unusable. Despite the date-check goal, it seems that the function to check the date works incorrectly, said Tarakanov, owing to the developer having gotten a simple date-checking coding routine wrong. Still, the malware often ends up proceeding to the final stage of infection anyway.
In its initial analysis of the malware, a team from Kaspserky said that one of the malwares modules was named Wiper, which is
another name for the Flame espionage malware
that was used to infect PCs in numerous countries including Egypt and Iran. In addition, Shamoon appeared to be collecting information about interesting files on the infected system, and sharing it with attackers, suggesting that it, too, might have been designed for espionage purposes.
But at the time, Kaspersky noted that any direct link with Flame appeared to be tenuous at best, because Flame employed specific service names and drivers that didnt appear in Shamoon, as well as an entirely different technique for deleting data on infected hard drives It is more likely that this is a copycat, the work of a script kiddies inspired by the story, according to the Kaspersky analysis. Nowadays, destructive malware is rare; the main focus of cybercriminals is financial profit. Cases like the one here do not appear very often.
Building on that research, Tarakanov said Wednesday that the coding error was yet more proof that the authors of Flame and Shamoon were different. This error indirectly confirms our initial conclusion that the Shamoon malware is not the Wiper malware that attacked Iranian systems, he said. Wiper is presumed to be a cyber-weapon and, if so, it should have been developed by a team of professionals. But experienced programmers would hardly be expected to mess up a date comparison routine.
So, who exactly is Cutting Sword of Justice? The groups Pastebin post said theyre an anti-oppression hacker group that have been fed up of crimes and atrocities taking place in various countries around the world, especially in the neighboring countries such as Syria, Bahrain, Yemen, Lebanon, Egypt, and singled out the ruling Al Saud regime in Saudi Arabia for corruption, financed by Muslims (sic) oil resources.
According to the Pastebin post, the group first targeted its malware at Saudi Aramco, which is the state-owned national oil company of Saudi Arabia. We penetrated a system of Aramco company by using the hacked systems in several countries and then sended (sic) a malicious virus to destroy thirty thousand computers networked in this company, said the hacktivist group.
Cutting Sword of Justice suggested that Shamoon wouldnt be its last malware attack. We invite all anti-tyranny hacker groups all over the world to join this movement, it said. We want them to support this movement by designing and performing such operations, if they are against tyranny and oppression.
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Shamoon Malware Might Be Flame Copycat