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Stuxnet Virus, Duqu Virus And At Least 3 Others Reportedly Built On Same Platform

Stuxnet Virus

First Posted: 12/28/11 06:46 PM ET Updated: 12/29/11 04:06 PM ET


By Jim Finkle

(Reuters) - The Stuxnet virus that last year damaged Iran's nuclear program was likely one of at least five cyber weapons developed on a single platform whose roots trace back to 2007, according to new research from Russian computer security firm Kaspersky Lab.

Security experts widely believe that the United States and Israel were behind Stuxnet, though the two nations have officially declined to comment on the matter.

A Pentagon spokesman on Wednesday declined comment on Kaspersky's research, which did not address who was behind Stuxnet.

Stuxnet has already been linked to another virus, the Duqu data-stealing trojan, but Kaspersky's research suggests the cyber weapons program that targeted Iran may be far more sophisticated than previously known.

Kaspersky's director of global research & analysis, Costin Raiu, told Reuters on Wednesday that his team has gathered evidence that shows the same platform that was used to build Stuxnet and Duqu was also used to create at least three other pieces of malware.

Raiu said the platform is comprised of a group of compatible software modules designed to fit together, each with different functions. Its developers can build new cyber weapons by simply adding and removing modules.

"It's like a Lego set. You can assemble the components into anything: a robot or a house or a tank," he said.

Kaspersky named the platform "Tilded" because many of the files in Duqu and Stuxnet have names beginning with the tilde symbol "~" and the letter "d."

Researchers with Kaspersky have not found any new types of malware built on the Tilded platform, Raiu said, but they are fairly certain that they exist because shared components of Stuxnet and Duqu appear to be searching for their kin.

When a machine becomes infected with Duqu or Stuxnet, the shared components on the platform search for two unique registry keys on the PC linked to Duqu and Stuxnet that are then used to load the main piece of malware onto the computer, he said.

Kaspersky recently discovered new shared components that search for at least three other unique registry keys, which suggests that the developers of Stuxnet and Duqu also built at least three other pieces of malware using the same platform, he added.

Those modules handle tasks including delivering the malware to a PC, installing it, communicating with its operators, stealing data and replicating itself.

Makers of anti-virus software including Kaspersky, U.S. firm Symantec Corp and Japan's Trend Micro Inc have already incorporated technology into their products to protect computers from getting infected with Stuxnet and Duqu.

Yet it would be relatively easy for the developers of those highly sophisticated viruses to create other weapons that can evade detection by those anti-virus programs by the modules in the Tilded platform, he said.

Kaspersky believes that Tilded traces back to at least 2007 because specific code installed by Duqu was compiled from a device running a Windows operating system on August 31, 2007.

(Reporting By Jim Finkle; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)

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By Jim Finkle (Reuters) - The Stuxnet virus that last year damaged Iran's nuclear program was likely one of at least five cyber weapons developed on a single platform whose roots trace b...
By Jim Finkle (Reuters) - The Stuxnet virus that last year damaged Iran's nuclear program was likely one of at least five cyber weapons developed on a single platform whose roots trace b...
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11:45 AM on 12/30/2011
"Kaspersky's research suggests the cyber weapons program that targeted Iran may be far more sophisticated than previously known."
Which basically insinuates that the virus is still alive and well in the Iranian software/computer and continues to wreak havoc on Iran's illegal nuke programme, in spite of the Iranian’s attempts to rid their system of it.
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
11:03 AM on 12/30/2011
ok

but what does that all mean ??
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The Refudiator
Refudiating morons since 1943
01:29 AM on 01/01/2012
It sucks to be an Iranian tech support guy....
06:32 AM on 12/30/2011
No doubt The US is "behind" a lot of shady things. I wish they would leave Iran alone and instead flatten out Isreal .. Going after Iran amoounts nothing but another war for Oil - and more lives will be lost being nothing but "fodder" for King Oil. i don't blame iran one bit for locking up Oil Exports. Too bad tha so many Americans continue to feed quarters into the Obama Spin Machine. Iran is just another Iraq and Afghanistan with the difference it will trigger WWIII, because other countries too ar efed up with America's dangerous BS
12:23 AM on 12/30/2011
WELL LETS USE IT TO SHUT IRAN SHIPS DOWN AND CONTINUE TO SHUT DOWN THE NUKE PROGRAM
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aphidavis
"So much that Liberals know, just isn't so"
11:25 PM on 12/29/2011
I really don't care whodunnit, just glad they did.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elicourey
It takes a nation of millions to hold me back!
08:11 PM on 12/29/2011
Why is there a picture of a MacBook Pro keyboard? Everyone knows Macs are safe from viruses....well, unless you're running Windows on them.
09:51 PM on 12/29/2011
That is not entirely true. While Macs are less susceptible to viruses and trojans, they are far from safe. The fact is that most businesses and governments do not buy into the extra expenses that go with supplying Macs and therefore opt for the lesser expenses of other PCs. Another factor is that most of the productive suites required for most businesses are not compatable with Macs, making Macs a bad choice for businesses. I have run into this problem on several occasions, one of when I was in college. Any student with a Mac might as well plan on visiting the campus computer lab to get their work done unless they were running the Windows OS.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elicourey
It takes a nation of millions to hold me back!
11:12 PM on 12/29/2011
Not as much of a problem as it used to be, but I understand what you're saying.
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Paul Andrews
How To Absolutely Secure Your Computer
12:28 AM on 12/30/2011
there is only one way to be absolutely safe from malware,
i show you how to be completely safe from all malware in my ebook
http://youcandiagnoseandrepairanyfailure.blogspot.com/
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grundoboy
I aint scared of no ghost(writer)
11:31 PM on 12/29/2011
bzzzz,,,wrong
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elicourey
It takes a nation of millions to hold me back!
12:18 AM on 12/30/2011
bzzzz,,,,right
07:19 PM on 12/29/2011
To the person that said we are all screwed! Speak for yourself, not me. I can dismantle viruses nicely, I wish IT courses was mandatory in schools.
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Paul Andrews
How To Absolutely Secure Your Computer
12:30 AM on 12/30/2011
i believe you but its much better to prevent the infection, it dosent take a crook long to empty your bank account
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SickHippie
No, YOUR micro-bio is empty.
06:05 PM on 12/29/2011
Interesting that the US would announce a while back that any assault on computer systems here would be a declaration of war...
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wrabbitt
Soylent Green IS People.
04:39 PM on 12/29/2011
So what you're telling us is that it wasn't some pizza faced little brat trying to give everyone a bad day. (We already knew that) Iran got a drone, I hope they enjoy the virus.
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KingKrub
04:59 PM on 12/29/2011
Soylent Green WAS people.....
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SickHippie
No, YOUR micro-bio is empty.
06:09 PM on 12/29/2011
It's set in 2022, so Soylent Green WILL BE people?
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06:09 PM on 12/29/2011
Iran long ago reverse engineered the virus so they could kill it.

As for the drone, they will also reverse engineer it (Iranian engineers are just as intelligent as US engineers).

BUT in the case of the drone, most of the technology is well known because drones are built using Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) technology. Drones consist of:

- Intel/AMD based embedded computers

- Linux operating system except for the real-time flight control computer which uses something like Thread-x or QNX.

- standard small jet engine

- standard optical sensors (the COTS one are that good now)

The only real custom technology is ...

- the optical lens system

- the applications (but these can easily be reverse engineered).
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waldopepper
I'd tell you all about me if you were my friend.
07:48 PM on 12/29/2011
If you can provide a credible source for this speculation please.
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Paul Andrews
How To Absolutely Secure Your Computer
12:46 AM on 12/30/2011
i read an article about how crooks could be in a parked car and if you use your garage door opener they could capture and analyze the rf transmission and be able to imitate it when you are not at home and have access to your house. its probable that the iranians captured rf exchanges to/from a drone and gained access to the drone in that manner. the drone transmissions/receptions should contain geophysical data and with some trending software should be able to determine the location of its commander and only respond to the legitimate controller
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Joseph Veverka
01:54 PM on 12/29/2011
We seem to know a lot about some thing that we shouldn't know anything about. Article sounds like an admission of guilt to me. How can you know the code contain interchangeable modules without knowing the code itself, or, maybe someone is doing that self serving I'm an expert thing some people like to do.
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06:02 PM on 12/29/2011
All technology can be reverse engineered.

That is exactly what Kaspersky (a non-US company) did.

A reverse compiler is not hard to write (I wrote one years ago when I was first starting out in technology). Now, Kaspersky has vastly better tools to rip apart a virus and discover all its secrets.
08:24 PM on 12/29/2011
Maybe you should learn about computers. You can decompile any piece of software and look at the code that was used to create it.
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Joseph Veverka
10:14 AM on 12/30/2011
Thanks for the link. I'll read it when I have time.
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wakohnen
God's Peace, Pricele$$
01:43 PM on 12/29/2011
Lets not get too dependant on our computers now. oops, too late. One of these gets out we are all screwed.
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Joseph Veverka
02:00 PM on 12/29/2011
Do worry Siemens makes industrial automated controls with their own propriety language not many people can read much less write. I have seen their small controls in the manf industry and the language just looks like caveman goop.
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wakohnen
God's Peace, Pricele$$
02:35 PM on 12/29/2011
when people cannot read or write a specific code they usually use a computer program to translate. Even with their own propriety language it would have to be heavily encrypted where there are no common sequences to the characters in order for it to be un-crackable. I do agree that their work is quite impressive.
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Brian Gilmer
Respect the bunny.
06:08 PM on 12/29/2011
Siemens controllers like run on VxWorks, Linux or even MS Windows. It is very rare for embedded systems developers to write their own OS.
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cuoi
The obstacle is the path
05:49 PM on 12/29/2011
All those folks on verizon getting lost because they couldn't use their smartphone gps to tell them where to go when the system went down and they couldn't read maps...
psandysdad
The older you get, the more excuses you have.
01:07 PM on 12/29/2011
Does the USGov have the capability to engage in cyberwar? Develop viruses?

Do you think they'll admit it?
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Justgot2thinking
I'm a Mom, a Grandma and a nice person.
12:54 PM on 12/29/2011
Is it right for governent secrets to be told to the public? We don't know anything about it and probably shouldn't but worse, people who shouldn't know at all, now know.
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mlfertig
The grass isn't always greener
01:55 PM on 12/29/2011
I know what you mean..certain things are best kept secret for the sake of national defense. Like the old saying.."a little knowledge can be dangerous thing" (why do i have the feeling that someone is going to use that quote to come back with a rude reply? lol) F&F
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Joseph Veverka
02:01 PM on 12/29/2011
The article is BS at best.