RavMonE.exe

RavMonE.Exe
Common name RavMonE
Technical name Win32.RJump.A
Aliases Rajump, Jisx, Siweol, Bdoor-DIJ
Family RJump
Classification Virus
Type Trojan
Subtype Worm
Isolation June 2006
Point of isolation Unknown
Point of origin Unknown
Author(s) Unknown

RavMonE, known more correctly as RJump, is a Trojan that opens a backdoor on computers running Microsoft Windows. Once a computer is infected, the virus allows unauthorized users to gain access to the computer's contents. This poses a security risk for the infected machine's user, as the attacker can steal personal information, and use the computer as an access point into an internal network.

RavMonE was made famous in September 2006 when a number of iPod videos were shipped with the virus already installed.[1] Because the virus only infects Windows computers, it can be inferred that Apple's contracted manufacturer was not using Macintosh computers. Apple came under some public criticism for releasing the virus with their product.

Description

RavMonE is a worm written in the Python scripting language and was converted into a Windows executable file using the Py2Exe tool.[2] It attempts to spread by copying itself to mapped and removable storage drives. It can be transmitted by opening infected email attachments and downloading infected files from the Internet. It can also be spread through removable media, such as CD-ROMs, flash memory, digital cameras and multimedia players.

Action

Once the virus is executed, it performs the following tasks.

  1. It copies itself to %WINDIR% as RavMonE.exe.
  2. It adds the value "RavAV" = "%WINDIR%\RavMonE.exe" to the registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run.
  3. It opens a random port and accepts remote commands.
  4. It creates a log file RavMonLog to store the port number.
  5. It posts a HTTP request to advise the attacker of the infected computer's IP address and the number of the port opened.

When a removable storage device is connected to the infected computer it copies the following files to that device:

Aliases

See also

References

  1. ProcessLibrary.com/directory/files/msvcr71/

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, September 01, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.