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F-Secure finds rare digitally signed malware

Researcher says it's unusual to find a signed copy of malware, especially from a government agency, in this case the Agricultural Research and Development Institute of Malaysia.

Elinor Mills Former Staff Writer
Elinor Mills covers Internet security and privacy. She joined CNET News in 2005 after working as a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Portugal and writing for The Industry Standard, the IDG News Service and the Associated Press.
Elinor Mills
2 min read
This screen shot shows details of the certificate that was stolen and used to trick computers into trusting malware.
This screenshot shows details of the certificate that was stolen and used to trick computers into trusting malware. F-Secure
Researchers at F-Secure have uncovered a rarity--malware that is signed with a valid code-signing certificate stolen from a government.

The malware uses a certificate for mardi.gov.my, which is the Agricultural Research and Development Institute of Malaysia. That agency told F-Secure that the certificate had been stolen "quite some time ago." It expired at the end of September so is no longer effective for authentication.

The Trojan program, which F-Secure detected as Agent.DTIW, spreads via malicious PDF files that exploit a vulnerability in Adobe Reader 8, according to the F-Secure blog.

"The malware downloads additional malicious components from a server called worldnewsmagazines.org. Some of those components are also signed, although this time by an entity called www.esupplychain.com.tw," the blog post says.

Code-signing certificates are used to authenticate software so a computer will trust it and run it.

"It's not that common to find a signed copy of malware. It's even rarer that it's signed with an official key belonging to a government," Mikko Hypponen wrote on the blog.

Stolen digital certificates are used by hackers to trick people into visiting malicious Web sites, as well as trick computers into running untrusted code. They were used with Stuxnet, which targeted SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition) systems, and more recently with the recently discovered Duqu malware.

Being targeted by hackers is a growing problem for certificate authorities that issue the certificates. Dutch DigiNotar filed for bankruptcy after its system was breached and a hacker was able to generate fake certificates. The same hacker claimed credit for that breach, as well as one involving CA Comodo and its resellers earlier this year.

And this isn't the first time there has been an issue with certificates from Malaysia. Earlier this month, Mozilla said that Malaysian certificate authority DigiCert Sdn. Bhd had issued 22 certificates with weak keys. While there was no evidence that the certificates were issued fraudulently, the weak keys allowed the certificates to be compromised, Mozilla said.

Meanwhile, Dutch certificate authority KPN said it was suspending the issuing of certificates after finding a distributed denial-of-service tool on one of its Web servers.