Craig Cline's Blog

January 2005
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31          
Dec   Feb


 Thursday, January 27, 2005
Mobile malware kills Symbian service
New Trojan horse renders some Symbian mobile phones useless

By John Blau, IDG News Service
January 24, 2005

Two new Trojan horse programs threaten to render some Symbian-based mobile phones totally useless.

   ADVERTISEMENT
  

The programs, Gavno.a and Gavno.b, masquerade as patch files designed to trick users into downloading them, said Aaron Davidson, chief executive officer of SimWorks International, in a telephone interview on Monday.

Although almost identical with Gavno.a, Gavno.b contains the Cabir worm, which attempts to send a copy of the Trojan horse to other nearby Symbian-based phones via short-range wireless Bluetooth technology.

The Gavno Trojans, according to Davidson, are the first to aim at disrupting a core function of mobile phones -- telephony -- in addition to other applications such as text messaging, e-mail and address books. "Gavno will effectively turn a mobile phone into a paperweight," he said.

Gavno.a and Gavno.b are proof-of-concept Trojan horses that "are not yet in the wild," Davidson said. "We were given an anonymous tip to have a look at them, which we've done. They're real."

Even if the Gavno Trojans aren't sophisticated programs, "they could still cause a lot of damage," Davidson said.

Gavno a., which has a size of around 2KB, comes disguised in a SIS (Symbian Installation System) file, called patch.sis. Gava.b, which is slightly larger, is tucked inside the SIS file patch_v2.sis.

Davidson believes the Trojan programs originated in Russia.

The programs affect phones, such as Nokia's (Profile, Products, Articles) 6600 and 7610 models, using Symbian's OS version 7 with the Series 60 graphical user interface, according to SimWorks, which is located in Auckland.

Not affected are Symbian-based phones such as the P900 and P910 from Sony (Profile, Products, Articles) Ericsson Mobile Communications AB and the A925 and 1000 from Motorola (Profile, Products, Articles) Inc. equipped with the graphical user interface from UIQ Technology AB, SimWorks said. Also unaffected are Nokia's 3650 and Siemens' (Profile, Products, Articles) SX1, running Symbian OS version 6.x together with the Series 60 interface.

To fix infected phones, users will need to restore them to their factory settings, resulting in the loss of all personal data, such as phone book and calendar, according to Davidson.

Mobile phone antivirus experts at F-Secure have not come across the Gavno Trojan horses, nor have they received reports or questions from customers, said Mikko Hyppönen, director of antivirus research at Helsinki-based F-Secure (Profile, Products, Articles). "Even if we haven't located the malware ourselves, we do believe it is out there if SimWorks says it is," Hyppönen said. "Lots of new mobile viruses, worms and Trojan horses are emerging around the world."

In December, SimWorks detected the mobile Trojan horse, MetalGear.a. The program, which masquerades itself as a Symbian version of the Metal Gear Solid game, disables antivirus programs and also installs a version of the Cabir worm identified earlier in the year.


2:02:56 PM    

We're so blind as a nation.......

The Speech Bush Should have Given This is the s.... The Speech Bush Should have Given

This is the speech that I wish President Bush had given in fall, 2002, as he was trying to convince Congress to give him the authority to go to war against Iraq.


My fellow Americans:

I want us to go to war against Iraq. But I want us to have our eyes open and be completely realistic.

A war against Iraq will be expensive. It will cost you, the taxpayer, about $300 billion over five years. I know Wolfowitz is telling you Iraq's oil revenues will pay for it all, but that's ridiculous. Iraq only pumps about $10 billion a year worth of oil, and it's going to need that just to run the new government we're putting in. No, we're going to have to pay for it, ourselves. I'm going to ask you for $25 billion, then $80 billion, then another $80 billion. And so on. I'm going to be back to you for money more often than that unemployed relative that you don't like. The cost of the war is going to drive up my already massive budget deficits from about $370 billion to more like $450 billion a year. Just so you understand, I'm going to cut taxes on rich people at the same time that I fight this war. Then I'm going to borrow the money to fight it, and to pay for much of what the government does. And you and your children will be paying off that debt for decades. In the meantime, your dollar isn't going to go as far when you buy something made overseas, since running those kinds of deficits will weaken our currency. (And I've set things up so that most things you buy will be made overseas.) We'll have to keep interest rates higher than they would otherwise have been and keep the economy in the doldrums, because otherwise my war deficits would cause massive inflation.

So I'm going to put you, your children, and your grandchildren deeply in hock to fight this war. I'm going to make it so there won't be a lot of new jobs created, and I'm going to use the excuse of the Federal red ink to cut way back on government services that you depend on. For the super-rich, or as I call them, "my base," this Iraq war thing is truly inspired. We use it to put up the deficit to the point where the Democrats and the more bleeding heart Republicans in Congress can't dare create any new programs to help the middle classes. We all know that the super-rich--about 3 million people in our country of 295 million-- would have to pay for those programs, since they own 45 percent of the privately held wealth. I'm damn sure going to make sure they aren't inconvenienced that way for a good long time to come.

Then, this Iraq War that I want you to authorize as part of the War on Terror is going to be costly in American lives. By the time of my second inaugural, over 1,300 brave women and men of the US armed forces will be dead as a result of this Iraq war, and 10,371 will have been maimed and wounded, many of them for life. America's streets and homeless shelters will likely be flooded, down the line, with some of these wounded vets. They will have problems finding work, with one or two limbs gone and often significant psychological damage. They will have even more trouble keeping any jobs they find. They will be mentally traumatized the rest of their lives by the horror they are going to see, and sometimes commit, in Iraq. But, well we've got a saying in Texas. I think you've got in over in Arkansas, too. You can't make an omelette without . . . you gotta break some eggs to wrassle up some breakfast.

I know Dick Cheney and Condi Rice have gone around scaring your kids with wild talk of Iraqi nukes. I have to confess to you that my CIA director, George Tenet, tells me that the evidence for that kind of thing just doesn't exist. In fact, I have to be frank and say that the Intelligence and Research Division of the State Department doesn't think Saddam has much of anything left even from his chemical weapons program. Maybe he destroyed the stuff and doesn't want to admit it because he's afraid the Shiites and Kurds will rise up against him without it. Anyway, Iraq just doesn't pose any immediate threat to the United States and probably doesn't have anything useful left of their weapons programs of the 1980s.

There also isn't any operational link between a secular Arab nationalist like Saddam and the religious loonies of al-Qaeda. They're scared of one another and hate each other more than each hates us. In fact, I have to be perfectly honest and admit that if we overthrow Saddam's secular Arab nationalist government, Iraq's Sunni Arabs will be disillusioned and full of despair. They are likely to turn to al-Qaeda as an alternative. So, folks, what I'm about to do could deliver 5 million Iraqis into the hands of people who are insisting they join some al-Qaeda offshoot immediately. Or else.

So why do I want to go to war? Look, folks, I'm just not going to tell you. I don't have to tell you. There is little transparency about these things in the executive, because we're running a kind of rump empire out of the president's office. After 20 or 30 years it will all leak out. Until then, you'll just have to trust me.


[Informed Comment]
10:54:36 AM