An online tool billed as able to calculate the amount of money taken by poker
sites is actually malware designed to steal online poker players' login details.
The rakeback calculator RBCalc.exe, which was distributed on gaming site
Checkraised.com,
creates a backdoor into users' computers to covertly store gamblers'
information.
Advertisement
The program silently drops four executable files into the player's system and
uses a rootkit driver to conceal the operation.
The tool's author could then steal log-in information for various online
poker websites including
Partypoker.com,
Empirepoker,
Eurobetpoker and
Pokernow.
Having gained access, the hacker could then empty the compromised account by
playing poker against themselves and losing on purpose.
The backdoor was uncovered by
F-Secure's
Blacklight
rootkit detection technology.
Shortly after the discovery, Checkraised.com removed the offending file from
its website and issued an official statement advising users to change their
poker site passwords as well as offering instructions for manually removing the
malware.
"Following the exponential rise of interest in online poker, it is inevitable
that malware authors would follow suit with programs to separate players from
their money," said Kimmo Kasslin, a researcher at F-Secure's data security
laboratory.
"What is significant is the fact that this particular scam was hosted, albeit
unwittingly, on a legitimate site and used rootkit technology to cloak itself."
F-Secure warned players that standard security software from the bigger
vendors would not have protected against this rootkit exploit.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article