Why Flame is Lame
We have gotten a number of submissions asking about "Flame", the malware that was spotted targeting systems in a number of arab countries. According to existing write-ups, the malware is about 20 MB in size, and consists of a number of binary modules that are held together by a duct tape script written in LUA. A good part of the size of the malware is associated with its LUA interpreter.
If you ever find something like that using perl instead of LUA... maybe I did it. I love to tie together various existing binaries using perl duct tape. However, I am not writing malware... and any serious commercial malware writing company would have probably fired me after seeing this approach. Using LUA would probably not fair much better. "Real" malware is typically plugged together from various modules, but compiled into one compact binary. Pulling up a random Spyeye description shows that it is only 70kBytes large, and retails for $500. Whatever government contractor put together "Flame" probably charged a lot more then that. Like with most IT needs: If you run some government malware supply department, think going COTS.
Of course, "Flame" is different because it appears to be "government sponsored". Get over it. Did you know governments hire spies? People who get paid big bucks (I hope) to do what can generally be described as "evil and illegal stuff". They actually do that for pretty much as long as governments exist, and McAfee may even have a signature for it.
We are getting a lot of requests for hints on how to detect that your are infected with Flame. Short answer: If you got enough free time on your hand to look for "Flame", you are doing something right. Take a vacation. More likely then not, your time is better spent looking for malware in general. In the end, it doesn't matter that much why someone is infecting you with the malware d'jour. The Important part is how they got in. They pretty much all use the same pool of vulnerabilities, and similar exfiltration techniques. Flame is actually pretty lame when it comes to exfiltrating data as it uses odd user-agent strings. Instead of looking for Flame: Setup a system to whitelist user-agents. That way, you may find some malware that actually matters, and if you happen to be infected with Flame, you will see that too.
But you say: Hey! I can't whitelist user-agents! Sorry: you already lost. On a good note: scrap that backup system. All your important data is already safely backed up in various government vaults. (recovery is a pain though... )
Sorry for the rant. But had to get it out of the system. Oh... and in case you are still worried... the Iranian CERT got a Flame removal tool [2]. Just apply that. I am sure it is all safe and such.
[1] http://www.symantec.com/security_response/writeup.jsp?docid=2010-020216-0135-99
[2] http://certcc.ir/index.php?name=news&file=article&sid=1894
------
Johannes B. Ullrich, Ph.D.
SANS Technology Institute
Twitter
Application Security: Securing Web Apps, APIs, and Microservices | Washington | Dec 13th - Dec 18th 2024 |
Comments
...yeah, but the restores are a b!tch.
John Hardin
May 31st 2012
1 decade ago
KBR
May 31st 2012
1 decade ago
cheezman
May 31st 2012
1 decade ago
Steven Chamberlain
May 31st 2012
1 decade ago
Btw Israel and Iran are not "arab" countries. Aside from the minor orientalism issue, the distinction may be important when looking for a common thread as to why they were set alight with the Flame.
keb
Jun 1st 2012
1 decade ago
jullrich@sans.edu
Jun 1st 2012
1 decade ago