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Duqu contains a backdoor that steals information. Infostealers need to send the stolen info back somehow. Careful infostealers try to make the transfer look innocent in case somebody is watching network traffic.
Duqu hides it's traffic by making it look like normal web traffic. Duqu connects to a server (206.183.111.97 aka canoyragomez.rapidns.com, which used to be in India) and sends a http request. The server will respond with a blank JPG image. After which Duqu sends back a 56kB JPG file called dsc00001.jpg and appends the stolen information (encrypted with AES) to the end of the image file.
Even if somebody is watching outbound traffic, this wouldn't look too weird.
So, out of all possible JPG images, what image did the authors of Duqu select to be used for this task?
This one:
It's a NASA picture of two galaxies colliding.
Why this picture?
Beats us.
Do any of our readers have any ideas?
Post your theories to the comments of this blog entry. Here's one theory to get you started.
On 21/10/11 At 12:09 PM
Weiterlesen...
Duqu hides it's traffic by making it look like normal web traffic. Duqu connects to a server (206.183.111.97 aka canoyragomez.rapidns.com, which used to be in India) and sends a http request. The server will respond with a blank JPG image. After which Duqu sends back a 56kB JPG file called dsc00001.jpg and appends the stolen information (encrypted with AES) to the end of the image file.
Even if somebody is watching outbound traffic, this wouldn't look too weird.
So, out of all possible JPG images, what image did the authors of Duqu select to be used for this task?
This one:
It's a NASA picture of two galaxies colliding.
Why this picture?
Beats us.
Do any of our readers have any ideas?
Post your theories to the comments of this blog entry. Here's one theory to get you started.
On 21/10/11 At 12:09 PM
Weiterlesen...