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Abstract: Last-minute presentations:
Last-minute presentations:
15:40 - 16:00 P0wn the cloud. The good, the bad, and the pugly of cloud computing Dan Hubbard, Websense
16:00 - 16:20 Recent rogueware Kurt Baumgartner, PC Tools
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15:40 - 16:00 P0wn the cloud. The good, the bad, and the pugly of cloud
computing, Dan Hubbard, Websense
Cloud computing is all the rage and headlines are a plenty on
anything and everything about cloud computing. This
presentation will discuss and demonstrate how this throwback to
centralized computing can be used to de-centralize attacks and
how it opens up new opportunities and threats to security
researchers.
Live demonstrations will be given.
16:00 - 16:20 Recent rogueware, Kurt Baumgartner, PC Tools
Fraud can distract the marketplace from effective products.
Snake oil is a part of traditional Chinese medicine and turns
out to have some merit as a concentrated source of EPA, an
arthritis and joint inflammation pain reliever, due to Chinese
watersnake oil content. When Clark Stanley and other Western
characters started selling various rattlesnake oil knockoffs
and ineffective versions of oil liniments, an era of
hucksterism boomed. The stain of the 'snake oil seller'
unfortunately remains on the American vernacular.
We are reliving a peak in the security marketplace's
appearance of snake oil peddlers. Booming demand for effective
software security products provide opportunity for all, so
peddlers are back in strength, repackaging faux security
software with pretty images, false claims and alarming
advertising. What is new about rogue anti-spyware this year?
This group has effectively evaded AV/anti-adware technologies
over the past year and is working to stay ahead of defences.
The software hucksters actively developing and peddling fake AV
solutions reworked distribution schemes, which in turn, are
reflected in implementation details of the distributed
software. These software components fill a user's system with
intimidating 'fakealert' pop-ups, co-opted Sysinternals humour,
and other messages engineered to convince the user to hand over
a credit card number to pay for help with inaccurately reported
problems.
As the accelerating volumes of morphing malware and advances in
AV scanner evasion over the past few years helped drive the
need on a global scale for behavioural-based technology, this
rogueware poses new problems for programmatic behavioural
analysis. Some of the groups recently have added arguably
beneficial components to their changing software, and some no
longer perform blatantly malicious behaviours. The situation is
no longer black and white. The prevalence of driveby exploits
delivering unwanted Vundo installs of yesterday is waning and
being replaced with subtler methods of delivery and behaviour.
We will survey multiple fakealerts, including the much
publicized MonaRonaDona scam, and dive into the low-level
details of binders and downloaders that have risen in
popularity. We will examine some effective obfuscation methods
and ridiculously non-beneficial behaviours that the Vundo
authors implemented to keep ahead of well-known AV scanner
detection, and then move on to the schemes of today. Following
the trends of the rest of the adware market, many rogueware
software components exhibit much lesser malicious behaviour
implemented in software hacks, and no longer dramatically
affect system stability and security along with immutable
system changes. The implementations change, snake oil remains.
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