Court order cripples Coreflood botnet, says FBI

26.04.2011

"Two possible reasons why the Coreflood Botnet is getting smaller are as follows: (i) because Coreflood has not been able to update itself on infected computers, anti-virus vendors have been able to release virus signatures capable of detecting the latest versions of Coreflood," Neumiller said in her affidavit. "And (ii) as victims of Coreflood are notified of their infected computers, they may be disconnecting the infected computers from the Internet or taking other measures to disable or remove Coreflood."

The restraining order, which was transformed from "temporary" to "preliminary" this week by U.S. District Court Judge Vanessa Bryant, allows the DOJ and FBI to identify infected computers using IP addresses. The agencies then notify the ISPs (Internet service providers) responsible for those addresses; the ISPs are to send the owners of those PCs a form letter telling them that their computer is infected and urging them to run tools to delete the malware.

While the volume of beacons from U.S. PCs has fallen to one-tenth of the number prior to the takedown, Neumiller noted that beacons from foreign machines -- which haven't received instructions to stop running the bot -- have not dropped as rapidly. As of last Friday, beacons from foreign PCs were about a quarter that of April 13.

Neumiller also said that the FBI has identified "seventeen state or local government agencies, including one police department; three airports; two defense contractors; five banks or financial institutions; approximately thirty colleges or universities; approximately twenty hospital or health care companies; and hundreds of businesses" infected with Coreflood.

MicrosoftMicrosoft today said it was releasing another edition of its Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT) to bolster the cleaning process. Alles zu Microsoft auf CIO.de

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