<<< NEWS FROM THE LAB - Monday, November 14, 2011 >>> ARCHIVES | SEARCH Malware Signed With a Governmental Signing Key Posted by Mikko @ 14:23 GMT Certificates and CAs continue to be a hot topic (think Stuxnet, Duqu, Comodogate, Diginotar, et cetera).



Every now and then we run into malware that has been signed with a code signing certificate. This is problematic, as an unsigned Windows application will produce a warning to the end user if he downloads it from the web — signed applications won't do this. Also some security systems might trust signed code more than unsigned code.



In some of these cases, the certificate has been created by the criminals just for the purpose for signing malware. In other cases they steal code signing certificates (and their passphrases) so they can sign code as someone else.



We recently found a sample signed with a stolen certificate. The file properties looked like this:



Publisher: Adobe Systems Incorporated

Copyright: Copyright (C) 2010

Product: Adobe Systems Apps

File version: 8, 0, 12, 78

Comments: Product of Adobe Systems



And the signing info was:



Signer: anjungnet.mardi.gov.my

Digisign Server ID (Enrich)

GTE CyberTrust Global Root

Signing date: 5:36 24/08/2011



Turns out mardi.gov.my is part of the Government of Malaysia: Malaysian Agricultural Research and Development Institute. According the information we received from the Malaysian authorities, this certificate has been stolen "quite some time ago".







The malware itself has been spread via malicious PDF files that drop it after exploiting Adobe Reader 8. The malware downloads additional malicious components from a server called worldnewsmagazines.org. Some of those components are also signed, although this time by an entity called www.esupplychain.com.tw.



It's not that common to find a signed copy of malware. It's even rarer that it's signed with an official key belonging to a government.



This particular malware does not gain much advantage of the signature any more, as the mardi.gov.my certificate expired in the end of September.



The Malaysian Government has been informed about the case.



We detect this malware as Trojan-Downloader:W32/Agent.DTIW. MD5 hash is e9f89d406e32ca88c32ac22852c25841.









