So, you think your computer is protected. You play it safe.
You're careful. You watch where you go. You think you've got it
covered. You have no idea that your machine is full of viruses and your
precious machine is on the verge of self-destruction.
The Move to The New
Anti-Virus Model
by: Tim Klemmer
This is the second in a series of articles highlighting reasons why
we need a new model for anti-virus and security solutions.
Reason #1: the Basic Model
Anti-virus software vendors still rely on yesterday’s methods for
solving today’s problems: they wait for the next virus to wreak havoc
and then produce a solution. That worked for a long time when a virus
would take years to traverse the world. But in this fast-paced
Interet-crazed world we live in today, this type of solution is no
longer applicable. Now a virus can traverse the world and infect
millions of computers in minutes.
In the good old days a virus traveled by floppy disk. Put a floppy in
your computer and save some data to it and the virus would infect the
floppy. Then unwittingly put the infected floppy in another computer and
presto the new computer would become infected. (I’m skimming over a lot
of detail here to make a point). So the virus’ progress was slow and
steady. Anti-virus vendors had time on their side. They had the time to
get a copy of the virus, dissect it, run it through a series of tests to
come up with a signature string (see below for definition), put the
string into a database of strings to search for when scanning your hard
drive (and floppies) and release the new database to the public. Ten
years ago this system worked very well.
But now everyone is connected via the Internet. Now, using email as a
transport point, it doesn’t take years to gather momentum, instead it
takes a matter of minutes. And here is where the model breaks. Step back
and ask yourself the following question: if vendors can catch “known and
unknown viruses” as their literature states, how then is it that we
continue to have virus problems?
The answer lies in the fact that virus authors have been more
creative in coming up with new ways to infect and wreak havoc and the
software industry has not responded in kind, preferring to stay embedded
in its old fashioned methodologies.
Why don’t the old ways work any more, you might ask? It’s relatively
simple. Let’s go through the steps.
A virus author unleashes NewVirus via email. He mass mails his virus
to thousands of people. Some, not all, unwittingly open the attachment
thinking it’s from a friend or the subject is so enticing that they are
fooled into opening it without thinking it’s a problem (cf. nude
pictures of Anna Kournikova). The email attachment immediately starts
emailing everyone in his contact list and embeds itself into his
operating system so that it’s activated every time he turns on his
computer.
The folks he emails in turn get fooled into thinking the email is
valid and they open the attachment. Very quickly all hell breaks loose.
Agencies which monitor Internet traffic see problems arising with the
sudden spikes in email traffic and they begin to get calls or emails
alerting them to the fact that there’s a new problem. Samples are
obtained and sent off to anti-virus vendors. They pass the emails
through a series of tests to analyze what exactly the virus does and how
it does it. Additionally analysis is performed to extract a unique
string of 1’s and 0’s to identify this attachment as none other than
NewVirus. This is called the signature string. It’s important that
whatever string is arrived at does not exist in any other program or
piece of software; otherwise, you will get what is commonly called a
false positive.
Quick digression on “false positives”: if a vendor arrives at a
unique string that just happens to be embedded in Microsoft Word, then
every time a user runs a scan of their hard drive, Microsoft Word will
be identified as being infected with NewVirus. Users will uninstall Word
and re-install only to learn that they are still infected. There will be
complaints; the vendor will be forced to re-assess the signature string
and re-release his list of strings and admit the error.
Typically signature strings are matched against a whole boatload of
commonplace software just to protect against this occurrence, but it
still happens and vendors learn to add new software to their test beds.
OK, so the vendor has arrived at a signature string. Next? Implement
the string into their string database so that when their scanners are
scanning they will match what’s on your hard drive to what’s in the
database. After the database has been updated they release the database
to their customers in what’s commonly called a “push” where they send
the updates to their primary users.
If you did not buy into this service, you must know enough to log
into your anti-virus vendor and update your software so that you stay
current.
So where are we? The bad guy –or problem teenager- has unleashed
NewVirus. NewVirus has infected thousands of computers; vendors have
been alerted; NewVirus continues to infect; solutions are achieved and
“pushed” to corporate clients; NewVirus continues to infect hundreds and
thousands of computers; corporate clients breathe a sigh of relief and
alert their users as to the new threat.
Thousands, if not millions, of computers become infected and need to
be cleaned because the best way to solve the virus problem is to wait
for each new virus to come along and solve on a case by case basis.
But if you sat back and said: what if? What if you categorized all
the things a virus can do (or could do), built a series of computers to
allow any email attachment or program to have full rein of a computer
(much like it would have on your own computer – such a computer is
called “honeypot”) and then analyze that computer for unwelcome
behavior?
That would be a true pre-emptive strike against all malicious
software. This is the behavior-based model. Such a model would actually
protect you unknown viruses, along with all the known 70,000 viruses.
In part 2 we’ll discuss the risks and security failures of having
distributed vendor software on your desktop.
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