Marin Independent Journal

Microsoft targets criminal botnet

- By Frank Bajak

Microsoft announced legal action Monday seeking to disrupt a major cybercrime digital network that uses more than 1 million zombie computers to loot bank accounts and spread ransomware, which experts consider a major threat to the U. S. presidenti­al election.

The operation to knock offline command-and- control servers for a global botnet that uses an infrastruc­ture known as Trickbot to infect computers with malware was initiated with an order that Microsoft obtained in Virginia federal court on Oct. 6. Microsoft argued that the crime network is abusing its trademark.

“It is very hard to tell how effective it will be but we are confident it will have a very long-lasting effect,” said Jean-Ian Boutin, head of threat research at ESET, one of several cybersecur­ity firms that partnered with Microsoft to map the commandand- control servers. “We’re sure that they are going to notice and it will be hard for them to get back to the state that the botnet was in.”

Cybersecur­ity experts said that Microsoft’s use of a U. S. court order to persuade internet providers to take down the botnet servers is laudable. But they add that it’s not apt to be successful because too many won’t comply and because Trickbot’s operators have a decentrali­zed fall- back system and employ encrypted routing.

Paul Vixie of Farsight Security said via email “experience tells me it won’t scale — there are toomany IP’s behind uncooperat­ive national borders.” And the cybersecur­ity firm Intel 471 reported no significan­t hit on Trickbot operations Monday and predicted “little medium- to long-termimpact” in a report shared with The Associated Press.

But ransomware expert Brett Callow of the cybersecur­ity firm Emsisoft said that a temporary Trickbot disruption could, at least during the election, limit attacks and prevent the activation of ransomware on systems already infected.

The announceme­nt follows a Washington Post report Friday of a major — but ultimately unsuccessf­ul — effort by the U. S. military’s Cyber Command to dismantle Trickbot beginning last month with direct attacks rather than asking providers to deny hosting to domains used by command- and- control servers.

A U. S. policy called “persistent engagement” authorizes U. S. cyberwarri­ors to engage hostile hackers in cyberspace and disrupt their operations with code, something Cybercom did against Russian misinforma­tion jockeys during U. S. midterm elections in 2018.

Created in 2016 and used by a loose consortium of Russian- speaking cybercrimi­nals, Trickbot is a digital superstruc­ture for sowing malware in the computers of unwitting individual­s and websites. In recent months, its operators have been increasing­ly renting it out to other criminals who have used it to sow ransomware, which encrypts data on target networks, crippling them until the victims pay up.

One of the biggest reported victims of a ransomware variety sowed by Trickbot called Ryuk was the hospital chain Universal Health Services, which said all 250 of its U. S. facilities were hobbled in an attack last month that forced doctors and nurses to resort to paper and pencil.

U. S. Depar tment of Homeland Security officials list ransomware as a major threat to the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election. They fear an attack could freeze up state or local voter registrati­on systems, disrupting voting, or knock out result-reporting websites.

While cybersecur­ity experts say the operators of Trickbot and affiliated digital crime syndicates are Russian speakers mostly based in eastern Europe, they caution that they are motivated by profit, not politics. They do, however, operate with impunity with no interferen­ce from the Kremlin as long as their targets are abroad.

Trickbot is a particular­ly robust internet nuisance. Called “malware-asaservice,” its modular architectu­re lets it be used as a delivery mechanism for a wide array of criminal activity. It began mostly as a so- called banking Trojan that attempts to steal credential­s from online bank account so criminals can fraudulent­ly transfer cash.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States