Sophos

W32/Rbot-VD

Category
Type
What to do
Prevalence low high

Summary

 
How it spreads
  • Network shares
Protection available since 2 February 2005 13:46:09 (GMT)
Detected by All Sophos products
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Action

Please follow the instructions for removing worms.

Change any data that may have become compromised.

You will also need to edit the following registry entries, if they are present. Please read the warning about editing the registry.

At the taskbar, click Start|Run. Type 'Regedit' and press Return. The registry editor opens.

Before you edit the registry, you should make a backup. On the 'Registry' menu, click 'Export Registry File'. In the 'Export range' panel, click 'All', then save your registry as Backup.

Locate the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE entries:

HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run

HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunServices

and remove any reference to any file you deleted.

Close the registry editor.

More Information

W32/Rbot-VD is a network worm and IRC backdoor Trojan for the Windows platform that spreads using a variety of techniques, including exploiting weak passwords on computers and SQL servers, exploiting operating system vulnerabilities (including DCOM-RPC, LSASS, WebDAV and UPNP) and using backdoors opened by other worms or Trojans. W32/Rbot-VD is a network worm and IRC backdoor Trojan for the Windows platform that spreads using a variety of techniques, including exploiting weak passwords on computers and SQL servers, exploiting operating system vulnerabilities (including DCOM-RPC, LSASS, WebDAV and UPNP) and using backdoors opened by other worms or Trojans.

Patches for the operating system vulnerabilities exploited by W32/Rbot-VD can be obtained from Microsoft at:

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms04-012.mspx
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms03-039.mspx
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms03-007.mspx
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms01-059.mspx

W32/Rbot-VD can be controlled by a remote attacker over IRC channels. The backdoor component of W32/Rbot-TL can be instructed by a remote user to perform the following functions:

start an FTP server
start a Proxy server
start a web server
take part in distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks
log keypresses
capture screen/webcam images
packet sniffing
port scanning
download/execute arbitrary files
start a remote shell (RLOGIN)

W32/Rbot-VD attempts to terminate a number of processes including those related to various av and security applications.

W32/Rbot-VD may arrive as a PIF file with different filenames.

Once executed W32/Rbot-VD copies itself to the root folder and creates a second Trojan executable in the Windows system folder with the filename winis.exe.

In order to be able to run automatically when Windows starts up W32/Rbot-VD sets the registry entries:

HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run\
update
"winis.exe"

HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunServices\
update
"winis.exe"

W32/Rbot-VD also sets the registry entry:

HKCU\Software\Microsoft\OLE\update
"winis.exe"

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