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[Full-disclosure] HITB2011KUL - Mobile Malware Analysis
- To: full-disclosure@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: [Full-disclosure] HITB2011KUL - Mobile Malware Analysis
- From: "research@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <research@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 07 Feb 2012 17:56:15 +0100
Title:
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HITB2011KUL - Mobile Malware Analysis
Date:
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2012-02-06
References:
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Download: http://www.vulnerability-lab.com/resources/videos/424.wmv
View: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVAuZ7jf7Sk
VL-ID:
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424
Status:
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Published
Exploitation-Technique:
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Conference
Severity:
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High
Details:
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Mobile malware is becoming a larger concern every day, as the proliferation of
smartphones continues and more and
more in-the-wild malicious applications appear. Unfortunately, many people
charged with malware analysis and/or
network defense lack the tools or the know-how to analyze malicious binaries on
anything but a standard Windows/x86
environment – and thus mobile malware remains shrouded in mystery, with
inadequate response compared to traditional
desktop-based malware.
This presentation aims to combat that problem. I’ll explain the process of
setting up a virtual machine capable of
running and analyzing Android applications (chosen as the mobile platform most
likely to see new malware), and then
step through analysis of live samples collected from the wild. The analysis
will focus primarily on network behavior
that can be used to detect infected devices – something whose usefulness is not
limited to cell phone carriers, given
the number of mobile devices that communicate over local Wi-Fi networks.
Credits:
========
Alex Kirk is a senior member of the Sourcefire VRT, and has been involved in
vulnerability analysis and detection since
starting there in 2004. He currently runs the VRT’s malware zoo, which has
produced over 1TB worth of packet capture
data by running live samples from the ClamAV virus database. He is the author
of a pair of Snort-related chapters in
the 2009 book “Practical Intrusion Analysis: Prevention and Detection for the
Twenty-First Century,” is a regular
contributor to the VRT blog (http://vrt-blog.snort.org/), and routinely speaks
at security conferences around the world
on IDS-related topics.
Disclaimer:
===========
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Lab. Permission to electronically redistribute this alert in its unmodified
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Copyright ©
2012|Vulnerability-Lab
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