About Me

Abhishek Karnik

Abhishek Karnik

Read More

Feeds & Podcasts

Blogs

Meet the Bloggers

Archive

Tags

#SecChat $1 million guarantee 12 Scams of Christmas access to live fraud resolution agents Acquisition Alex Thurber Android antivirus Apple botnet Channel Partners cloud security Compliance Consumer counter identity theft credit card fraud and protection credit fraud alerts credit monitoring credit monitoring and resolution critical infrastructure Cyber Security Mom cyberbullying Cybercrime cybermom data breach data center data center security Data Protection Dave DeWalt DLP Email & Web Security embedded encryption Endpoint Protection enterprise facebook fake anti-virus software Family Safety Friday Security Highlights global threat intelligence google government Hacktivism how to talk to kids how to talk to teens identity fraud identity fraud scams identity protection identity protection $1 million guarantee identity protection fraud identity protection surveillance identity surveillance identity theft identity theft expert identity theft fraud identity theft protection identity theft protection product Identity thieves and cybercriminals intel iphone kids online behavior lost wallet protection malware McAfee McAfee Channel McAfee Family Protection McAfee Identity Protection McAfee Initiative to Fight Cybercrime McAfee Labs McAfee security products Mid-Market Mobile mobile malware mobile security monitor credit and personal information Network Security online personal data protection online safety Operation Aurora PCI personal identity theft fraud personal information loss personal information protection phishing privacy proactive identity protection proactive identity surveillance Public Sector restore credit and personal identity Risk and Compliance scam scams scareware security smartphones social media social networking social networks spam Stuxnet twitter vulnerability Web 2.0 work with victim restore identity

FakeAlert Malware Disguises as McAfee Product

Wednesday, September 16, 2009 at 7:23pm by Abhishek Karnik
Abhishek Karnik

“Illusion is needed to disguise the emptiness within.” – Arthur Erickson

I thought this was the perfect quote for fake anti-malware software or FakeAlert threats. FakeAlert malware imposes an illusion of protection on its users, but all thats within is an empty hollow inside. It has become a common sight for malware to be spoofing program file resources such as icons or company information from other legitimate software. One of the most spoofed resources are Microsoft file properties such as company information or icons from programs “calc.exe”, “notepad.exe”, even Windows folder icons. Why would they do this ?

It is easy for less- computer-savvy users to trust that a program is legitimate based on visible features of a file, such as its icon or file properties. Its a nice facade for malware to slip through. We recently came across a FakeAlert threat that attempts to disguise itself as a McAfee product using a spoofed McAfee icon. Perhaps FakeAlert malware authors are taking notice of McAfee as one of the world’s most trusted security companies.

Call it social engineering or just another sneaky attempt to get by. The bottom line is, looks are deceptive so don’t trust everything you see whether its a resource icon or company information in the file properties. This FakeAlert malware that brands itself  as “AntiVirus Pro 2010” is all but a spin off of FakeAlert-XPSecCenter (aka WinreAnimator amongst its many re-branded names).

The following are some updated snapshots of FakeAlert-XPSecCenter:

Image 1
Image 2
Image 3

Please beware of this FakeAlert variant and it is not in any way related to McAfee products. Safe Surfing !!

Bookmark and Share

Submit your own comments / message for this post

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

 

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Comments (3)

  • Jay October 27, 2009 3:15AM

    My Studio 1735 laptop has been hit by this virus. How do I remove it? Thank you in advance for your help in this matter.

  • Bonnie September 19, 2009 6:40AM

    I am getting an Alert w/McAfee icon……NO ACTION TAKEN….detection:MWS Action: No action taken Object: Mwsoestb.dll Location: C:/Program files\Mywebsearch\Bar\;/bin

    It is typed on top of typing and then…….yes no
    I can not get the window down the clicking either….then reboot and still can/t get rid of it. Please help me asap!!!!!!

  • PaulJ September 17, 2009 6:18AM

    Perhaps FakeAlert malware authors are taking notice of McAfee as one of the world’s most trusted security companies
    Actually, I think it’s just that more cable companies are bundling McAfee’s products with their broadband service, so more users are getting to know the “M” logos as their anti-virus software…