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2005 International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks (DSN'05)
Detecting Stealth Software with Strider GhostBuster
Yokohama, Japan
June 28-July 01
ISBN: 0-7695-2282-3
Yi-Min Wang, Microsoft Research
Doug Beck, Microsoft Research
Binh Vo, Microsoft Research
Roussi Roussev, Microsoft Research
Chad Verbowski, Microsoft Research
Stealth malware programs that silently infect enterprise and consumer machines are becoming a major threat to the future of the Internet [XZ04]. Resource hiding is a powerful stealth technique commonly used by malware to evade detection by computer users and anti-malware scanners. In this paper, we focus on a subclass of malware, termed "ghostware", which hide files, configuration settings, processes, and loaded modules from the operating system?s query and enumeration Application Programming Interfaces (APIs). Instead of targeting individual stealth implementations, we describe a systematic framework for detecting multiple types of hidden resources by leveraging the hiding behavior as a detection mechanism. Specifically, we adopt a cross-view diff-based approach to ghostware detection by comparing a high-level infected scan with a low-level clean scan and alternatively comparing an inside-the-box infected scan with an outside-the-box clean scan. We describe the design and implementation of the Strider GhostBuster tool and demonstrate its efficiency and effectiveness in detecting resources hidden by real-world malware such as rootkits, Trojans, and key-loggers.
Citation:
Yi-Min Wang, Doug Beck, Binh Vo, Roussi Roussev, Chad Verbowski, "Detecting Stealth Software with Strider GhostBuster," dsn, pp.368-377, 2005 International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks (DSN'05), 2005
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