Security experts have warned that new developments in malware are allowing
criminals to stay one step ahead of security software.
Marc Henauer, head of the cyber-crime division at the Swiss Justice and
Police Department, said in an interview last week that viruses and other malware
now have the capability to change their signature every few hours.
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This means that the attackers are often one step ahead of protection
software.
Geoff Sweeney, chief technology officer at Tier-3, a behavioural analysis IT
security firm, echoed the remarks.
"Self-changing code designed to dynamically evade recognition is a fact of
life," he said. "It automatically adapts to the anti-spam and anti-malware
engines that it encounters."
Unfortunately the know-how and construction kits used to create this
shape-shifting threat are now readily available and are unleashing a wave of
malware based on social engineering techniques.
Self-changing code designed to dynamically evade recognition is a fact of life
Geoff Sweeney Tier-3
"Highly targeted emails containing personalised information and
shape-shifting Trojan attachments are the latest development," said Sweeney.
"Each positive infection increases the 'hit rate' for the next wave of emails
sent out by the self-learning automated engines used by sophisticated attackers.
"
Sweeney believes that a non rules-based monitoring process must be set up to
defend all ingress and egress points covering SMTP, DNS, HTTP(s), IM etc.
"Once this is in place, defence against shape-shifting threats becomes
possible as does the removal of any previously established covert data leakage
channels that will be revealed and dealt with," he said.
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