New P2P botnet infects SSH servers all over the world

Botnet is hard to detect and with no centralized control server, harder to take down. …

Cartoon image of a desktop computer under attack from viruses.

Aurich Lawson

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Researchers have found what they believe is a previously undiscovered botnet that uses unusually advanced measures to covertly target millions of servers around the world.

The botnet uses proprietary software written from scratch to infect servers and corral them into a peer-to-peer network, researchers from security firm Guardicore Labs reported on Wednesday. P2P botnets distribute their administration among many infected nodes rather than relying on a control server to send commands and receive pilfered data. With no centralized server, the botnets are generally harder to spot and more difficult to shut down.

“What was intriguing about this campaign was that, at first sight, there was no apparent command and control (CNC) server being connected to,” Guardicore Labs researcher Ophir Harpaz wrote. “It was shortly after the beginning of the research when we understood no CNC existed in the first place.”

The botnet, with Guardicore Labs researchers have named FritzFrog, has a host of other advanced features, including:

  • In-memory payloads that never touch the disks of infected servers.
  • At least 20 versions of the software binary since January.
  • A sole focus on infecting secure shell, or SSH, servers that network administrators use to manage machines.
  • The ability to backdoor infected servers.
  • A list of login credential combinations used to suss out weak login passwords that’s more “extensive” than those in previously seen botnets.

Put that all together and…

Taken together, the attributes indicate an above-average operator who has invested considerable resources to build a botnet that’s effective, difficult to detect and resilient to takedowns. The new code base—combined with rapidly evolving versions and payloads

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