{"id":3250,"date":"2012-01-25T15:58:43","date_gmt":"2012-01-25T15:58:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.darknet.org.uk\/?p=3250"},"modified":"2015-09-09T19:37:01","modified_gmt":"2015-09-09T11:37:01","slug":"super-powered-malware-sandwiches-found-in-the-wild-frankenmalware","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.darknet.org.uk\/2012\/01\/super-powered-malware-sandwiches-found-in-the-wild-frankenmalware\/","title":{"rendered":"Super Powered Malware Sandwiches Found In The Wild – Frankenmalware"},"content":{"rendered":"

Now this is quite a fascinating story, especially if you know anything about Malware<\/a> and have interests in that area.<\/p>\n

It seems the latest development is the accidental development of new super-malware strains created by viruses infecting executable files of worms. Worms are generally executable files and well, viruses infect executables – so you can imagine what happens.<\/p>\n

Now the franken-worm has both the characteristics of the original worm and it also carries the virus – so when it spreads, the virus also spreads.<\/p>\n

Viruses are accidentally infecting worms on victims\u2019 computers, creating super-powered strains of hybrid software nasties.<\/p>\n

The monster malware spreads quicker than before, screws up systems worse than ever, and exposes private data in a way not even envisioned by the original virus writers.<\/p>\n

A study by antivirus outfit BitDefender found 40,000 such “Frankenmalware samples” in a study of 10 million infected files in early January, or 0.4 per cent of malware strains sampled. These cybercrime chimeras pose a greater risk to infected users than standard malware, the Romanian antivirus firm warns.<\/p>\n

\u201cIf you get one of these hybrids on your system, you could be facing financial troubles, computer problems, identity theft, and a wave of spam thrown in as a random bonus,\u201d said Loredana Botezatu, the BitDefender analyst who carried out the study. \u201cThe advent of malware sandwiches throws a new twist into the world of malware. They spread more efficiently, and will become increasingly difficult to predict.\u201d<\/p>\n

BitDefender doesn’t have historical data to go on. Even so it posits that frankenmalware is likely to grow at the same rate as regular computer viruses, or about 17 per cent year on year.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

There’s really unlimited possibilities with this, and the great thing (to me anyway) is that it occurred by complete accident. I guess the next step up would be virus authors purposely hunting down worm files and infecting them with additional capabilities.<\/p>\n

There’s always been cases of malware in the past that hunt down other malware and remove them from the host machine.<\/p>\n