Shaun Nichols in California, vnunet.com10 Jan 2008
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An investigation has uncovered a link between a recent phishing operation and
the infamous Storm worm.
Security experts believe that the botnet of infected PCs is now being leased
out by its operator to other criminal groups.
Researchers at security firm
F-Secure
uncovered the connection while investigating a group of phishing sites posing as
UK bank
Halifax.
The company found that the hosting of the phishing domain was being passed
around among a number of IP addresses.
When researchers cross-checked the addresses with other domains, they found
domains as 'hellosanta2008.com' and 'postcards2008.com' which had been linked to
fraudulent greeting cards used to spread the Storm worm over the holiday season.
The findings suggest that the operators of the Storm botnet are now allowing
the network of infected machines to be accessed by other groups for various
criminal activities.
"We have not seen this before. But we have been expecting something along
these lines," said F-Secure chief research officer Mikko Hyppönen in a
blog
posting.
F-Secure is among many security firms to warn that Storm could become a
commercial entity in 2008.
Researchers fear that Storm's computing power could be rented out for various
criminal activities.
Storm first
appeared in early 2007, circulating malware disguised as film of flooding in
Europe. Since then, the controllers have used everything from
spam runs to
fake greeting cards to snare victims.
Experts warn that the tactics used to build and operate Storm could become a
model for future
botnets.
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