Worm.Win32.Dorkbot_19e3e700d6
HEUR:Trojan.Win32.Generic (Kaspersky), Trojan.Win32.Generic!BT (VIPRE), Trojan.Win32.Pincav!IK (Emsisoft), Worm.Win32.Dorkbot.FD, GenericUSBInfector.YR, GenericProxy.YR, GenericSYNFlooder.YR, GenericUDPFlooder.YR, GenericDNSBlocker.YR, GenericMSNWorm.YR, GenericIRCBot.YR, GenericAutorunWorm.YR, WormDorkbot.YR, GenericPhysicalDrive0.YR, GenericInjector.YR, BankerGeneric.YR (Lavasoft MAS)
Behaviour: Banker, Trojan, Flooder, Worm, WormAutorun, IRCBot, MSNWorm, DNSBlocker, UDPFlooder, SYNFlooder, Trojan-Proxy, USBInfector
The description has been automatically generated by Lavasoft Malware Analysis System and it may contain incomplete or inaccurate information.
MD5: 19e3e700d6c86814564cb8c93a4d3021
SHA1: 6109911b178c4376592cd47412236dca742f0809
SHA256: 0523f26a56b4df2fb8358008f7716ce71bfdb656680a23f29bf4ab4c16dbeffa
SSDeep: 1536:tvv5HcT3l1lPpBglP n3S ahObwOFMOubMBaDgrmzlpcg796Zh:t35qTlhBg0n3GhUwOFMWsDg6zlpr6Zh
Size: 197090 bytes
File type: EXE
Platform: WIN32
Entropy: Not Packed
PEID: Armadillov171, MicrosoftVisualC, MicrosoftVisualCv50v60MFC, MicrosoftVisualC50, UPolyXv05_v6
Company: no certificate found
Created at: 2011-11-01 17:34:51
Summary:
Worm. A program that is primarily replicating on networks or removable drives.
Payload
| Behaviour | Description |
|---|---|
| WormAutorun | A worm can spread via removable drives. It writes its executable and creates "autorun.inf" scripts on all removable drives. The autorun script will execute the Worm's file once a user opens a drive's folder in Windows Explorer. |
| IRCBot | A bot can communicate with command and control servers via IRC channel. |
| MSNWorm | A worm can spread its copies through the MSN Messanger. |
| DNSBlocker | A program can block designated DNS servers for making it difficult for users to locate specific domains or web sites on the Internet. |
| UDPFlooder | This program can make a UDP flood. A UDP flood attack is a denial-of-service attack using the User Datagram Protocol (UDP). It can be initiated by sending a large number of UDP packets to random ports on a remote host. |
| SYNFlooder | This program can make a SYN flood. It is a form of denial-of-service attack in which an attacker sends a succession of SYN requests to a target's system in an attempt to consume enough server resources to make the system unresponsive to legitimate traffic. |
| Trojan-Proxy | This program can launch a proxy server (SOCKS4) on a designated TCP port. |
| USBInfector | A program can register a device notification with the help of RegisterDeviceNotification. So it is notified when a USB device is plugged and then the worm copies itself to the USB device plugged into the affected computer. |
Process activity
The Worm creates the following process(es):
19e3e700d6c86814564cb8c93a4d3021.exe:1896
19e3e700d6c86814564cb8c93a4d3021.exe:676
Reader_sl.exe:1064
wuauclt.exe:344
Xtkmkj.exe:1852
Xtkmkj.exe:1684
File activity
The process 19e3e700d6c86814564cb8c93a4d3021.exe:676 makes changes in a file system.
The Worm creates and/or writes to the following file(s):
%Documents and Settings%\%current user%\Application Data\Xtkmkj.exe (1281 bytes)
The process wuauclt.exe:344 makes changes in a file system.
The Worm creates and/or writes to the following file(s):
%WinDir%\SoftwareDistribution\DataStore\Logs\edb.log (1192 bytes)
The Worm deletes the following file(s):
%WinDir%\SoftwareDistribution\DataStore\Logs\tmp.edb (0 bytes)
Registry activity
The process 19e3e700d6c86814564cb8c93a4d3021.exe:1896 makes changes in a system registry.
The Worm creates and/or sets the following values in system registry:
[HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Cryptography\RNG]
"Seed" = "2B 81 70 FF CD A3 A9 47 62 7E 79 6E 2B 69 35 6E"
The process 19e3e700d6c86814564cb8c93a4d3021.exe:676 makes changes in a system registry.
The Worm creates and/or sets the following values in system registry:
[HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Cryptography\RNG]
"Seed" = "0C 59 66 4F 8E 21 4F 38 87 2B 0F 9A 35 A7 65 0A"
[HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell Folders]
"AppData" = "%Documents and Settings%\%current user%\Application Data"
To automatically run itself each time Windows is booted, the Worm adds the following link to its file to the system registry autorun key:
[HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run]
"Xtkmkj" = "%Documents and Settings%\%current user%\Application Data\Xtkmkj.exe"
The process Reader_sl.exe:1064 makes changes in a system registry.
The Worm creates and/or sets the following values in system registry:
[HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\MountPoints2\{c155cd73-744b-11e2-8294-806d6172696f}]
"BaseClass" = "Drive"
[HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell Folders]
"AppData" = "%Documents and Settings%\%current user%\Application Data"
[HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\MountPoints2\{c155cd72-744b-11e2-8294-806d6172696f}]
"BaseClass" = "Drive"
[HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\MountPoints2\{b98117e8-75ca-11e2-81b2-000c293708fb}]
"BaseClass" = "Drive"
[HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\MountPoints2\{c155cd75-744b-11e2-8294-806d6172696f}]
"BaseClass" = "Drive"
The process Xtkmkj.exe:1852 makes changes in a system registry.
The Worm creates and/or sets the following values in system registry:
[HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Cryptography\RNG]
"Seed" = "87 1A 69 22 CE 52 D2 66 3B 33 D7 9E 82 D2 E2 34"
The process Xtkmkj.exe:1684 makes changes in a system registry.
The Worm creates and/or sets the following values in system registry:
[HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Cryptography\RNG]
"Seed" = "2E 13 10 A3 16 D5 39 B6 C2 29 DD A1 F9 50 03 6D"
[HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell Folders]
"AppData" = "%Documents and Settings%\%current user%\Application Data"
Network activity (URLs)
| URL | IP |
|---|---|
| hxxp://api.wipmania.com/ (ET POLICY External IP Lookup Attempt To Wipmania ) | |
| ng.marketallone.com |
Rootkit activity
The Worm installs the following user-mode hooks in WININET.dll:
HttpSendRequestW
InternetWriteFile
HttpSendRequestA
The Worm installs the following user-mode hooks in ADVAPI32.dll:
RegCreateKeyExA
RegCreateKeyExW
The Worm installs the following user-mode hooks in WS2_32.dll:
send
GetAddrInfoW
The Worm installs the following user-mode hooks in kernel32.dll:
MoveFileA
CopyFileW
CopyFileA
MoveFileW
CreateFileW
CreateFileA
The Worm installs the following user-mode hooks in ntdll.dll:
LdrLoadDll
NtResumeThread
NtQueryDirectoryFile
NtEnumerateValueKey
Propagation
A worm can spread via removable drives. It writes its executable and creates "autorun.inf" scripts on all removable drives. The autorun script will execute the Worm's file once a user opens a drive's folder in Windows Explorer.
A program can register a device notification with the help of RegisterDeviceNotification. So it is notified when a USB device is plugged and then the worm copies itself to the USB device plugged into the affected computer.
A worm can spread its copies through the MSN Messanger.
Remove it with Ad-Aware
- Click (here) to download and install Ad-Aware Free Antivirus.
- Update the definition files.
- Run a full scan of your computer.
Manual removal*
- Scan a system with an anti-rootkit tool.
- Terminate malicious process(es) (How to End a Process With the Task Manager):
19e3e700d6c86814564cb8c93a4d3021.exe:1896
19e3e700d6c86814564cb8c93a4d3021.exe:676
wuauclt.exe:344
Xtkmkj.exe:1852
Xtkmkj.exe:1684 - Delete the original Worm file.
- Delete or disinfect the following files created/modified by the Worm:
%Documents and Settings%\%current user%\Application Data\Xtkmkj.exe (1281 bytes)
%WinDir%\SoftwareDistribution\DataStore\Logs\edb.log (1192 bytes) - Delete the following value(s) in the autorun key (How to Work with System Registry):
[HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run]
"Xtkmkj" = "%Documents and Settings%\%current user%\Application Data\Xtkmkj.exe" - Clean the Temporary Internet Files folder, which may contain infected files (How to clean Temporary Internet Files folder).
- Find and delete all copies of the worm's file together with "autorun.inf" scripts on removable drives.
- Reboot the computer.
*Manual removal may cause unexpected system behaviour and should be performed at your own risk.