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 Crimeware: Understanding New Attacks And Defenses
  

  Crimeware: Understanding New Attacks And Defenses by Markus Jakobsson ; Zulfikar Ramzan

  • Published by: ADDISON-WESLEY
  • Author: Markus Jakobsson ; Zulfikar Ramzan
  • Page Count: 582
  • Group: SECURITY & ENCRYPTION
  • ISBN: 0321501950/9780321501950
  • Published: Apr 2008

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Book Information and Description:

Crimeware: Understanding New Attacks And Defenses
“This book is the most current and comprehensive analysis of the state of Internet security threats right now. The review of current issues and predictions about problems years away are critical for truly understanding crimeware. Every concerned person should have a copy and use it for reference.”

  —Garth Bruen, Project KnujOn Designer

  There’s a new breed of online predators—serious criminals intent on stealing big bucks and top-secret information—and their weapons of choice are a dangerous array of tools called “crimeware.” With an ever-growing number of companies, organizations, and individuals turning to the Internet to get things done, there’s an urgent need to understand and prevent these online threats.

  Crimeware: Understanding New Attacks and Defenses will help security professionals, technical managers, students, and researchers understand and prevent specific crimeware threats. This book guides you through the essential security principles, techniques, and countermeasures to keep you one step ahead of the criminals, regardless of evolving technology and tactics. Security experts Markus Jakobsson and Zulfikar Ramzan have brought together chapter contributors who are among the best and the brightest in the security industry. Together, they will help you understand how crimeware works, how to identify it, and how to prevent future attacks before your company’s valuable information falls into the wrong hands. In self-contained chapters that go into varying degrees of depth, the book provides a thorough overview of crimeware, including not only concepts prevalent in the wild, but also ideas that so far have only been seen inside the laboratory.

  With this book, you will

* Understand current and emerging security threats including rootkits, bot networks, spyware, adware, and click fraud
* Recognize the interaction between various crimeware threats
* Gain awareness of the social, political, and legal implications of these threats
* Learn valuable countermeasures to stop crimeware in its tracks, now and in the future
* Acquire insight into future security trends and threats, and create an effective defense plan With contributions by Gary McGraw, Andrew Tanenbaum, Dave Cole, Oliver Friedrichs, Peter Ferrie, and others.

CONTENTS:

Preface xvii

  About the Authors xxi

  Chapter 1: Overview of Crimeware 1

  1.1 Introduction 2

  1.2 Prevalence of Crimeware 4

  1.3 Crimeware Threat Model and Taxonomy 5

  1.4 A Crimeware Menagerie 8

  1.5 Crimeware Distribution 19

  1.6 Infection and Compromise Points, Chokepoints, and Countermeasures 25

  1.7 Crimeware Installation 29

  1.8 Crimeware Usage 31

  1.9 Organizing Principles for the Remainder of This Text 35

  Chapter 2: A Taxonomy of Coding Errors 37

  2.1 The Trinity of Trouble 38

  2.2 The Seven Pernicious Kingdoms 40

  2.3 The Phyla 46

  2.4 More Phyla Needed 52

  Chapter 3: Crimeware and Peer-to-Peer Networks 55

  3.1 Malware in Peer-to-Peer Networks 55

  3.2 Human-Propagated Crimeware 76

  Chapter 4: Crimeware in Small Devices 83

  4.1 Propagation Through USB Drives 83

  4.2 Radio Frequency ID Crimeware 89

  4.3 Mobile Crimeware 99

  Chapter 5: Crimeware in Firmware 103

  5.1 Propagation by Firmware Updates 103

  5.2 Modeling WiFi Malware Epidemics 130

  Chapter 6: Crimeware in the Browser 155

  6.1 Transaction Generators: Rootkits for the Web 155

  6.2 Drive-By Pharming 160

  6.3 Using JavaScript to Commit Click Fraud 167

  Chapter 7: Bot Networks 183

  7.1 Introduction 183

  7.2 Network-Oriented Features of Botnets 188

  7.3 Software Features of Bots 205

  7.4 Web Bots and the General Future of Botnets 215

  7.5 Countermeasures 224

  Chapter 8: Rootkits 229

  8.1 Introduction 229

  8.2 Evolution of Rootkits 231

  8.3 User-Mode Windows Rootkits 233

  8.4 Kernel-Mode Rootkit Techniques 240

  8.5 Linux Rootkits 260

  8.6 BIOS Rootkits 264

  8.7 PCI Rootkits 265

  8.8 Virtual Machine—Based Rootkits 267

  8.9 Rootkit Defense 271

  Chapter 9: Virtual Worlds and Fraud 275

  9.1 Introduction 275

  9.2 MMOGs as a Domain for Fraud 278

  9.3 Electronic Fraud 283

  9.4 Fraud in MMOGs 285

  Chapter 10: Cybercrime and Politics 293

  10.1 Domain Name Abuse 295

  10.2 Campaign-Targeted Phishing 307

  10.2.1 Profit-Motivated Phishing 307

  10.3 Malicious Code and Security Risks 312

  10.4 Denial-of-Service Attacks 315

  10.5 Cognitive Election Hacking 316

  10.6 Public Voter Information Sources: FEC Databases 319

  10.7 Intercepting Voice Communications 320

  Chapter 11: Online Advertising Fraud 325

  11.1 History 325

  11.2 Revenue Models 326

  11.3 Types of Spam 332

  11.4 Forms of Attack 335

  11.5 Countermeasures 342

  11.6 Click Fraud Auditing 347

  11.7 The Economics of Click Fraud 352

  Chapter 12: Crimeware Business Models 355

  12.1 The Crimeware Business 355

  12.2 A Closer Look at Adware 386

  Chapter 13: The Educational Aspect of Security 397

  13.1 Why Education? 397

  13.2 Case Study: A Cartoon Approach 408

  Chapter 14: Surreptitious Code and the Law 413

  14.1 Introduction 413

  14.2 The Characteristics of Surreptitious Code 415

  14.3 Primary Applicable Laws 418

  14.4 Secondary Applicable Laws 430

  Chapter 15: Crimeware and Trusted Computing 457

  15.1 Introduction 457

  15.2 Anatomy of an Attack 458

  15.3 Combating Crimeware with Trusted Computing 460

  15.4 Case Studies 466

  Chapter 16: Technical Defense Techniques 473

  16.1 Case Study: Defense-in-Depth Against Spyware 475

  16.2 Crimeware-Resistant Authentication 484

  16.3 Virtual Machines as a Crimeware Defense Mechanism 510

  Chapter 17: The Future of Crimeware 515

  17.1 Crimeware, Terrorware, Vandalware, and Ransomware 515

  17.2 New Applications and Platforms 517

  17.3 Using Social Networks to Bootstrap Attacks 520

  17.4 New Use of the Internet: Controlling the Infrastructure 520

  17.5 Moving Up the Stack 520

  17.6 The Emergence of an E-Society: Are We Becoming More Vulnerable? 521

  17.7 The Big Picture 522

  References 525

  Index 557