http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,1951941,00.asp By Ryan Naraine April 24, 2006 A startup funded by the U.S. government's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is ready to emerge from stealth mode with hardware- and software-based technologies to fight the rapid spread of malicious rootkits. Komoku, of College Park, Md., plans to ship a beta of Gamma, a new rootkit detection tool that builds on a prototype used by several sensitive U.S. government departments to find operating system abnormalities that may be linked to malicious rootkit activity. A rootkit modifies the flow of the kernel to hide the presence of an attack or compromise on a machine. It gives a hacker remote user access to a compromised system while avoiding detection from anti-virus scanners. The company's prototype, called CoPilot, is a high-assurance PCI card capable of monitoring the host's memory and file system at the hardware level. It is specifically geared towards high-security servers and computers. Gamma, meanwhile, is a separate, software-only clone of CoPilot that will target businesses interested in a low-assurance tool for protecting laptops and personal computers. Komoku launched quietly in 2004 with about $2.5 million in funding and rootkit detection contracts from DARPA, the Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Navy. The company has its roots at the University of Maryland, where computer scientist William Arbaugh worked on what he calls a "unique approach" to finding rootkits. "Security technologies depend on the correctness of the system they're actually checking," said Arbaugh, who now serves as president of the five-employee outfit. "If something changes the system at the operating system level, it can't be reliably detected via the OS itself or through applications running on the system," he said in an interview with eWEEK. "We have this notion of what the operating system is supposed to look like and we look for deviations [from] that. We aren't initially looking for the rootkit; we look at the side effects of the infection." Komoku has partnered with security vendor Symantec to handle disinfection and restoration after rootkits and other sophisticated forms of malware are detected. Symantec's LiveState product combines with CoPilot and Gamma to restore the system to its original state. Jamie Butler, a renowned rootkit researcher who works as Komoku's chief technical officer, said Gamma will have limited clean-up capabilities because it is software-based and susceptible to direct attack, much like any application running on the operating system. "Clean-up is a very difficult goal while maintaining a running system. When you find a rootkit, you essentially have several choices. The easiest choice is to halt the system. But, that means that you'll lose any evidence that might be in memory. It also means that the services provided by that system are made unavailable," Butler explained. Another choice might be to eliminate the effects of the rootkit, but this could be very difficult because of the complicated nature of an operating system. A third choice would be to allow the rootkit to remain active while you attempt to discern its motives, Butler added, noting that both Gamma and CoPilot will allow all three of these choices. The plan is to have both the hardware and software versions collect forensic data when a compromise is detected. Butler said products are able to capture hidden malware in memory and send it back to a central management station where the products are running in enterprise mode. The company is also exploring potential partnerships with other security companies that have offline malware analysis tools, he said. Pricing details have not yet been worked out, but Arbaugh expects to ship CoPilot to high-end enterprises with super-sensitive data. Gamma, on the other hand, is a lower-assurance product and is aimed at protecting business assets that don't require high-end security protection or are unable to install hardware. Arbaugh said Gamma has been built with two modes of operation: an enterprise mode where it communicates with a central server to receive updates and incident reports, and a stand-alone mode where incidents are reported locally. Updates will be available via a subscription service similar to those in the anti-virus space, he said. Citing confidentiality issues, Arbaugh declined to discuss the severity of the rootkit threat on government networks. However, he said that during actual CoPilot tests, it was "very clear that the government shares the same problems like everyone else." The product was in the midst of testing on the U.S. Navy networks when news of the Sony rootkit issue made headlines in November 2005. "That was a zero-day rootkit to us, so we decided to throw it at CoPilot as part of the operational tests. We detected the Sony rootkit in all its vectors, in real-time," Butler said. According to statistics from Microsoft, rootkits account for more than 20 percent of all malicious programs removed from Windows machines. The stealthy technology has been found in a variety of threats, including spyware, Trojans and DRM (digital rights management). _________________________________ InfoSec News v2.0 - Coming Soon! http://www.infosecnews.org
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