Friday, February 5, 2016

RAT WARS 2.0: Advanced Techniques for Detecting RAT Screen Control


In the landscape of web maliciousness Remote Administration Trojans [1] are not a new trend but their usage is still strong and growing steady.

At its core a RAT is a backdoor facility used to let an attacker enter unnoticed into the victim computer to control it remotely: for example most banking trojan nowadays are using remote desktop modules to open a VNC/RDP channel to allow an attacker to exfiltrate the money from within the users browser inside its legit session.

Newer sophisticated malware like Dyre are stepped up the game by completely diverting the user on fake banking portals while keeping the login session alive in the background, and once the user has disclosed the required credentials, the attacker connect to the user machine via a remote desktop channel and perform the wire fraud unnoticed.

RAT Screen Control


The usual attack is comprised by two phases.

The first step is when a Dyre infected user enter the banking website location inside the browser and the request is proxied by the malware to a fake website that is identical to the bank website just after the real login. In the background Dyre keep the real banking session open.
The second phase happens as soon as the attacker receives an automated Jabber notification with user session data and a VNC callback to a protected terminal server. He then starts interacting with the user by sending challenging questions, fake pages and fake login field to the fake browsing session to the user. The user start answering the attackers forms providing needed information while the attacker starts a screen control session towards the user PC to use the real user session to perform the wire fraud.

This is why this kind of attack it is so hard to detect: for the most part the attack killchain [2] is happening out of reach from the bank's anti fraud capabilities. The only exception is the final exfiltration phase when the only thing left is the chance to detect the attacker session, but even then the attacker is coming from within the legit user session making things harder.
These inner weaknesses of classic agentless fraud detection techniques are the reason behind the increase of popularity and sophistication of this kind of attacks.
Since what agentless fraud detections can do is to detect infected users or detect the attacker session by diverting users to web fakes and masquerading the attacker session there is a high chance to nullify the whole detection.

Then how can a bank portal understand what’s going on if what they see is a session initiated from the usual user’s ip address, from the usual user’s browser fingerprint, without any kind of webinject/AST or other common indicators of compromise?

Advanced RAT detection techniques.


To respond to this new kind of fraud Minded Security has started to research viable detection techniques and implemented a new solution based on Telemetry Modeling.

This is a short description of the viable detection techniques: Desktop Properties Detection, Detection of Velocity Pings or Session Keepalives, Telemetry Modeling of User Biometrics, Telemetry Modeling of Protocols and IOC Detection.

Desktop Properties Detection

This is the most basic detection whose point is to detect anomalies in the properties of the browser/desktop used: for example older RDP protocols might alter the color depth, or hidden VNC session may have unusual desktop resolutions.

Those indicators can be tracked and then correlated to build a detection.

Detection of Velocity Pings or Session Keepalives

While waiting for the user to disclose his PIN/OTP the attacker must keep the user session alive if he want to use it later to perform a wire transfer. This is what “velocity pings” are for: periodic faster HTTP requests whose goal is to keep the session alive.

The requests cadence, their content can be used to build an indicator of compromise and trigger a detection.


Telemetry Modeling of User Biometrics


The point of this approach is to track the user telemetry (keyboard usage, mouse movements, input gestures) to build a model of the user. Once the model is built it is used as yardstick in an anomaly detection context: the output provided give an insight if the current session is being used by the usual users.

Unfortunately while this information is indeed useful, the weaknesses are manifold.
First the infrastructure needed is far from lightweight: it needs to store big data for the user models and has to run complex machine learning algorithms nearly real time to perform the anomaly detection. This means a complex and expensive infrastructure.
Secondly the detection is fooled in the corner case of a single machine shared by different people, think of a corporate environment [3].


Telemetry Modeling of Protocols

This detection is one of the most advanced and relies on tracking glitches and anomalies in how the user’s telemetry is transmitted by the desktop remote protocol.

For example if there is a remote desktop in place, the telemetry data is compressed and passed trough by the remote desktop protocol itself or if the user is browsing the bank page trough a virtual machine, the input is filtered by the VM layer. All these added software layers operates to synchronize between the input received and the input reproduced adding glitches that could be tracked as anomalies.

This let to have a very light engine that is able to lively catch latency generated by user interface flowing through filter-driver chains. Typically VM guest environments and remote control tools install additional layered interfaces to replicate cursor positions and this creates latency patterns we can detect.



Once these anomalies are collected they are used to understand in real time if there is a remote connection in place. We provide this detection approach in our anti fraud suite AMT - RATDET Module.


IOC Detection

A malware infection can alter the profile of the user’s machine/browser and these alterations could be tracked and used as indicators of compromise to flag the user as a potential victim of fraud.

Or it could be possible to check the existence of certain files on the user file system, like suspicious executables, hidden vnc servers and others that can be used as an evidence of infection.

As an example here is a brief proof of concept that is also used by common exploit kits:




These indicators vary from malware to malware but are indeed very useful to prevent a fraud in the early stage of the killchain, as soon the user is infected and before the exfiltration is put in place.



In conclusion In this rat-race against financial malware there is not a de facto detection to be used: malware are constantly evolving and so should our defense techniques

In our opinion the recipe to a successful anti fraud monitoring lies into having a flexible and modular approach: mixing different detection techniques to build an unified risk model of the users.
[3]: A provider for this kind of solution is BioCatch.

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