Security analysts are warning of an improvement in the SilentBanker Trojan
that makes it harder to detect and more effective at stealing data.
SilentBanker specifically targets financial web pages and tries to steal
log-in details using a key-logger. Although it has been
around
since last year the new version has a rootkit that makes finding infected files
very difficult.
"Whenever a user tries to view any files on the computer, the Trojan
intercepts that request and removes any reference to the Trojan's files, making
the files invisible," said
Symantec
researcher Liam O'Murchu.
"The last version of SilentBanker targeted over 400 banks, some of which use
two-factor authentication.
"The current version, as well as hiding itself, has added extra protection to
its configuration files in order to make it more difficult to discover which
sites are being targeted."
When a user tries to search in the registry for files that indicate an
infection, the rootkit in the Trojan intercepts the search request and
automatically hides its files from view.
SilentBanker is causing major concern because it is especially good at
defeating two-factor authentication. This involves the user having a separate
log-in token that is synchronised with the bank's server to augment a password.
The Trojan subverts the two-factor transaction by intercepting communications
before they are encrypted and forwarding them to the attacker, essentially
making the security of two-factor authentication useless.
The software is being spread via spam and may prove very costly given the
current
wave of phishing attacks being propagated in the light of the recent world
banking crisis.
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