F-Secure Virus Descriptions : Sircam
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| NAME: | Sircam |
| ALIAS: | I-Worm.Sircam, W32.Sircam, W32/SircCam |
Our tool to automatically remove the Sircam worm can be downloaded from:
ftp://ftp.europe.f-secure.com/anti-virus/tools/antisirc.exe
For more information on what the tool does, see the README file:
ftp://ftp.europe.f-secure.com/anti-virus/tools/antisirc.txt
INFORMATION ON THE SIRCAM WORM
Sircam is a mass mailing e-mail worm with the ability of
spreading through Windows Network shares. The worm's body is
137216 bytes long but when it comes as an e-mail attachment, it
larger in size due to a document that is attached to its body.
Sircam sends e-mails with variable user names and subject fields,
and attaches user documents with double extensions (such as .doc.pif
or .xls.lnk) to them.
When the worm runs on a clean system it copies itself to
different locations with different names:
1. The worm copies itself as 'SirC32.exe' to \Recycled\ folder.
The default EXE file startup Registry key:
[HKCR\exefile\shell\open\command]
is changed to '""[windows_drive]\recycled\SirC32.exe" "%1" %*"'.
This is done to activate a worm's copy every time an EXE file is
started. Since the recycled folder name is hardcoded the worm
does not work on machines with NTFS filesystem. Most Windows NT
and 2000 systems are installed on NTFS.
2. The worm copies itself as 'SCam32.exe' in the System
directory. The worm then creates a startup key for this file in
the Registry to be started during all Windows sessions:
[HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunServices]
"Driver32" = "<windows_system_dir_name>\SCam32.exe"
3. The worm copies itself as 'rundll32.exe' file to Windows
directory. The original 'rundll32.exe' file is renamed to
'run32.exe'. This copy exists only if a computer got infected
through a network share (see below).
4. Sometimes (once out of 33 cases) the worm places its copy to
Windows directory with the 'ScMx32.exe' name. In this case
another copy of the worm is created in the current user's
personal startup folder as 'Microsoft Internet Office.exe'. This
copy will be started when a user who got infected logs into a
system.
When a Sircam-infected e-mail attachment is opened it shows the
document it picked up from the sender machine's. The file is
displayed with the appropiate program according to it's
extension:
'.DOC': WinWord.exe or WordPad.exe
'.XLS': Excel.exe
'.ZIP': winzip.exe
This effectively disguises the worm's activity. While the user is
checking the document the system get infected (as described
above).
The worm uses Windows Address Book to collect e-mail addresses
('*.wab files). The worm also tries to look for e-mail addresses
in \Temporary Internet Files\ folder ('sho*', 'get*', 'hot*',
'*.html'). If a user has a working e-mail account the worm reads
the its setting. Otherwise the '[username]@prodigy.mx.net' is
used as the default sender's address and 'prodigy.net.mx' is used
for the SMTP server name. The worm has its own SMTP engine and
it sends out messages using this engine.
The worm collects a list of files with certain extensions
('.DOC', '.XLS', '.ZIP') into fake DLL files named 'sc*.dll'. The
worm then sends itself out with one of the document files it
found in a users's 'My Documents' folder.
Messages sent by Sircam look like this:
From: [user@address]
To: [user@address]
Subject: [document name without extension]
Hi! How are you?
'I send you this file in order to have your advice'
or
'I hope you can help me with this file that I send'
or
'I hope you like the file that I sendo you'
or
'This is the file with the information that you ask for'
See you later. Thanks
If a system's language is set to Spanish the worm sends messages
in Spanish:
Hola como estas ?
'Te mando este archivo para que me des tu punto de vista'
or
'Espero me puedas ayudar con el archivo que te mando'
or
'Espero te guste este archivo que te mando'
or
'Este es el archivo con la informaci n que me pediste'
Nos vemos pronto, gracias.
The attached file has the name of a picked document file with a
double extension like '.DOC.EXE', '.XLS.PIF'. The '.COM', '.BAT',
'.PIF' and '.LNK' are used as second (executable) extensions.
Since the worm can pick any of the user's personal document it
migh send out confidential information.
This worm also uses Windows network shares to spread. When doing
this, it first enumerates all the network shares available to the
infected computer. If there there is a writeable \recycled\
folder on a share, a copy of the worm is put to
\\[share]\recycled\' folder as 'SirCam32.exe' file. The
\\[share]\autexec.bat file is appended with an extra line: '@win
\recycled\SirC32.exe', so next time when an infected computer is
rebooted the worm will be started. The worm also copies itself as
'rundll32.exe' file to Windows directory of a remote system. The
original 'rundll32.exe' file is copied to 'run32.exe' before
that.
Payloads
The worm has two payloads. On 16th of October in one case out of
20 it deletes everything from the drive where Windows is
installed. On any other day in one of 50 cases it fills up the
drive where Windows is installed. In this case it creates a file
called '<windows drive>:\recycled\sircam.sys' and continuously
fills it with one of below given text strings until the hard
drive space is consumed.
'[SirCam_2rP_Ein_NoC_Rma_CuiTzeO_MicH_MeX]'
or
'[SirCam Version 1.0 Copyright 2001 2rP Made in / Hecho en
- Cuitzeo, Michoacan Mexico]'
Fortunately none of these payloads work due to bugs in the
trigger routine. The random number generator in not initialized
in the beginning so the worm will not activate it's payloads on
16th of October or on any other day.
Removal instructions:
If your system is infected with the worm first please download
this REG file and install it (by double-clicking on it):
ftp://ftp.europe.f-secure.com/anti-virus/tools/sirc_dis.reg
This will remove the worm's reference from the EXE file startup
key and the main worm's startup key in the Registry.
Warning! The system might become unusable if the worm's file is
deleted without modifying the EXE file startup key first.
After that the system can be safely disinfected with F-Secure
Anti-Virus. If for some reason the worm's file can't be deleted
from Windows (locked file), then you have to exit to pure DOS and
delete the worm's file manually or use a DOS-based scanner
(F-Prot for DOS for example). Note that for 100% disinfection all
worm's files needs to be deleted and Registry should be fixed
(see above).
Additional Note: If a workstation was infected trough a network
share '\windows\run32.exe' has to be renamed back to
'\windows\rundll32.exe' after disinfection.
The extra line in 'autoexec.bat' file that starts the worm from
\recycled\ folder should be removed also.
Network infection prevention:
If a network is infected and it is not possible to take it down
to disinfect all workstations, the following method can prevent
the worm from spreading to clean workstations:
In the \Recycled\ folder of a drive where Windows is installed,
it is needed to create a dummy file with SIRC32.EXE name and
read-only attribute.
[Analysis: Gergely Erdelyi, Alexey Podrezov; F-Secure Corp.; July 18-23, 2001]
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