Abstract
In this paper, we present our reverse engineering results for the Zeus crimeware toolkit which is one of the recent and powerful crimeware tools that emerged in the Internet underground community to control botnets. Zeus has reportedly infected over 3.6 million computers in the United States. Our analysis aims at uncovering the various obfuscation levels and shedding the light on the resulting code. Accordingly, we explain the bot building and installation/infection processes. In addition, we detail a method to extract the encryption key from the malware binary and use that to decrypt the network communications and the botnet configuration information. The reverse engineering insights, together with network traffic analysis, allow for a better understanding of the technologies and behaviors of such modern HTTP botnet crimeware toolkits and opens an opportunity to inject falsified information into the botnet communications which can be used to defame this crimeware toolkit. ©2010 IEEE.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Binsalleeh, H., Ormerod, T., Boukhtouta, A., Sinha, P., Youssef, A., Debbabi, M., & Wang, L. (2010). On the analysis of the Zeus botnet crimeware toolkit. In PST 2010: 2010 8th International Conference on Privacy, Security and Trust (pp. 31–38). https://doi.org/10.1109/PST.2010.5593240
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.