MIME tricks beat email virus scanners

Posted by   Virus Bulletin on   Dec 11, 2006

Simple encoding dodges slip malware past gateways.

A security researcher released a report last week claiming that some simple manipulation allowed him to get mails containing the EICAR test virus string past a variety of mail scanning products. Software from BitDefender, ClamAV, F-Prot and Kaspersky was reported to be vulnerable to the trick.

Stuttgart-based Hendrik Wiemer used Base64 encoding, including non-standard characters which should be ignored on decoding, to create a MIME document including the virus scanner test string. This was then passed through a small selection of mail scanners, of which only Alwil avast! and Barracuda's Spam Firewall were not fooled by the alteration of the file. F-Secure's Linux Gateway product reported it could not scan the mail, while the rest let it through without comment. Many email clients, including Microsoft Outlook, would correctly reassemble the EICAR string on receipt.

Further encoding produced even more failures to detect. It remains unclear whether the proof of concept would be viable with more complex, genuine malware.

A blog entry describing the test, including perl code to generate sample mails with complex encoding, is here. More information and mail-scanner test files are available from heise Security.

Posted on 11 December 2006 by Virus Bulletin

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