Polymorphic viruses and vulnerabilities in Web 2.0 technologies could cause
problems for IT security chiefs in the future, according to the latest biannual
Threat Report from Symantec released
today.
Symantec research scientist Ollie Whitehouse said there has been resurgence
in polymorphic techniques to create viruses, meaning they change signatures
every time they replicate to evade detection by conventional antivirus products.
"Historically, malicious code writers used packers as a cheap way to get the
maximum use of malicious code they’ve written," Whitehouse said. "But unpacking
engines have been able to detect these threats so hackers are reverting to
[polymorphic threats]." However, certain sections of code in polymorphic viruses
do remain the same and can be spotted by some engines, he added.
David Emm of antivirus vendor Kaspersky
Lab commented, "We're going to see the bad guys break new ground, but it's
not surprising that people are also taking older techniques and reapplying them.
"
Elsewhere, Symantec has recorded the highest number of new vulnerabilities
for any six-month period, at 2249. Web application vulnerabilities accounted for
69 percent of these, and as more enterprise applications are delivered via the
web the threats will grow, said Whitehouse.
Ajax
web application technology was also highlighted as a possible area of weaknesses
in corporate security, creating increased potential for cross-site scripting and
content injection attacks, while the interoperable nature of Web 2.0
applications could create further problems, said Symantec.
"If a vulnerability is found in one application then the ramifications are
vast for exposing [many users]," warned Whitehouse. "There is a gap in the
knowledge of many [IT chiefs] but in the next 12 to 18 months we will see a lot
more research about attack and defence methods.
David Boloker, chief technology officer of
emerging
technologies at IBM, said the problems "will have to be addressed further"
in the future and added that IBM specialists are "focused on Ajax security".
In other news, email security specialist
IronPort last week published research
that indicates over 50 percent of corporate desktops worldwide are infected with
malware.
The firm also launched its S-Series web security appliance – its first foray
into the anti-spyware market – which features URL- and reputation-based
filtering technology to stop threats at the perimeter.
"In 2006, we have seen two important trends working together: overall threat
volumes are increasing, and the level of sophistication is also increasing,"
said Tom Gillis, senior vice-president for Worldwide Marketing at IronPort.
Meanwhile, Kaspersky Lab has showcased a new version of its Internet Security
suite to make management easier and more centralised, and with improved
anti-virus capabilities, including better tools for root-kit detection and
removal.
"We're trying to produce a corporate release which utilises the technology
already in our personal products," said Kaspersky's Emm. "The cement that ties
it together is the admin kit, which gives IT staff the ability to define
policies and control real-time and on-demand scanning capabilities."
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article