NTA Monitor

Latest News

New version of network scanning tool arp-scan released

15th March 2011 A new version of a respected and popular network scanning tool has been released. Read More

Tests show rise in number of vulnerabilities affecting web applications with SQL Injection and XSS most common flaws

1st March 2011 SQL injection and cross-site scripting (XSS) were the most common flaws found in web applications in 2010 according to results from tests carried out by NTA Monitor. Read More

Assess risk to manage effects of budget cuts

9th February 2011 Signs of economic recovery may be appearing in some industries, but for most organisations - particularly in the public sector - budget cuts and cost savings are here to stay for the foreseeable future. Read More

"Basic security threats not changed in 15 years"

1st February 2011 There may have been significant technological advances to the hardware and software organisations use, but according to Roy Hills, who co-founded NTA Monitor in 1996, the basic security threats have not changed in the last 15 years. Read More
Date: 30th December 2005
Risk: Informational
Original Extract:

Keylogging programs are the epitome of online stealth, and they're also a mushrooming problem on the Internet, where identity and intellectual property thefts are fueling an explosion of key-capture tools.

Reports of new keylogging programs soared higher this year, as part of a wave of multifunction malware with integrated keylogging features, according to VeriSign Inc.'s security information company iDefense Inc. The programs often evade detection by anti-virus tools and can be difficult to detect once installed, experts warn. However, at least one anti-spyware company believes that reports about the danger posed by keyloggers are overstated.

More than 6,000 keylogging programs will be released by the end of this year, according to projections by iDefense. That's an increase of 2,000 percent over the last five years, company officials said.

Keyloggers have been around for years and are also sold as legitimate applications 'often as monitoring tools for concerned parents or suspicious spouses', according to Ken Dunham, director of malicious code at iDefense, in Reston, Va.

Earlier this year, police foiled a $420 million keylogger scam.

Security companies occasionally lock horns with makers of commercial keyloggers. For example, in early November, anti-spyware software maker Sunbelt Software Inc. was threatened with a lawsuit by RetroCoder Ltd., a U.K. company that was angry about Sunbelt listing RetroCoder's SpyMon keylogger in its threat database, according to a blog entry by Sunbelt President Alex Eckelberry in Clearwater, Fla.

SpyMon's EULA (end-user license agreement) forbids anti-spyware and anti-virus companies from using or analyzing the program, and RetroCoder threatened to enforce that provision in European Union court unless the program was removed from the threat database, according to Sunbelt officials.

Malicious keyloggers are increasingly part of modular programs that contain Trojan horse, spamming and remote control features, as well, Dunham said.

Anti-virus companies have developed signatures that will stop many of those programs before they can be installed, but new programs with unique signatures are readily available from malicious code download sites. In some cases, the programs' source code can be purchased so buyers can create their own keylogger variants, Dunham said.

Keyloggers are particularly common in countries where online banking fraud is a problem, such as Brazil, said Joe Stewart, a senior security researcher at Lurhq Corp., in Chicago. The keyloggers are coupled with Trojan programs, such as the Banker and PWSteal families, and are programmed to spring to life when victims type the URL of a specific bank or banks into their Web browser or when they launch a Web page with a specific name, Stewart said.

Keyloggers are also pouring out of countries in Eastern Europe that are less discriminating about what kind of log-in information they capture. China is a major source of Trojan and keylogger programs, such as Myfip, that are customized to steal intellectual property, such as Microsoft Corp. Word or CAD/CAM files, rather than personal or financial information, he said.

Still, some take issue with the dire warnings about keylogging programs.

Eckelberry used his blog to question iDefense's statistics on keylogging programs. He wrote that his company's researchers have identified only "a couple dozen" new keylogging programs since August, affecting only about 8,000 people.

References