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It has been almost a year since the rogue anti-virus products, a.k.a. scareware, became rampant. These Trojan families are typically spread via drive-by downloads, search-engine-optimization poisoning, spam campaigns, and clever social engineering.
Having these methods discussed in earlier blogs, today we will look into the protection mechanisms adopted by these fake alerts Trojan families to evade detection from antivirus vendors.
In the above screenshot, lots of junk code is visible between valid instructions. Usage of junk instructions is being used widely across Fake Alert families.
The screen shot shows the usage of API called SetArcDirection which is not necessary in the code. These kinds of unnecessary APIs are used by malware to defeat emulation. Sometimes, API calls that don’t exist are also used by these families to check if they are being emulated.
Lot of fake alert families uses their own custom packers, encryption routines. Some of the families patch the existing packers.
Usage of XMM, MMX and FPU instructions which are not needed in the code along with the other junk code are also utilized by most of the fake alert families.
The techniques discussed above are not something very new and has been used in notable malware. But fake alert Trojans use these evasion techniques to there full potential with every new variant. Just when we thought we’re seeing a decline in adware and spyware – fake alert Trojans families have stepped in to claim the scum of the Internet tag.
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