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Regular Contributor
Serekantum
Posts: 110
Registered: ‎12-01-2008

To Symantec experts...

Hi all. I wonder why Symantec does not focus its research on unraveling how the rogues change their code. Polymorphic malware is a huge problem because the detection signature is not a reliable system. Malware code changes frequently and has a different signature which is not recognized as a threat... In one week I have sent more than eight samples of malware that NIS09 not detected, and if they are running on the system then they are very difficult to completely disinfect.

I think Symantec should initiate new ways of establishing their safety directives, the detection signature is outdated and easy to circumvent. I think we should take a lot of improvements based on the application behavior.
 A good idea would be to create an equivalent function to a virtual machine to assess how each new program behavior, and actions carried out in the system before allowing their integration into the computer

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Rohit1gupta
Posts: 664
Registered: ‎09-30-2008

Re: To Symantec experts...

It will make norton slower
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NIS 2011 beta 18.0.0.107 Win 7 7600 RTM 32-bit
Rootkit Eradicator
Posts: 5,220
Registered: ‎05-30-2008

Re: To Symantec experts...

01. That is why Pulse Updates were Created.

 

02. I don't think Signature-based Detection is useless - far from it - that is why Pulse Updates were Created.  ;)

 

Tuesday, May 21, 2013: The Symantec THREATCON was Changed to Level 1: Normal | Tuesday, May 14, 2013: Microsoft "Patch Tuesday" | Sunday, May 05, 2013: Microsoft Internet Explorer 8 Zero-Day Vulnerability (Update Released)
Regular Contributor
Serekantum
Posts: 110
Registered: ‎12-01-2008

Re: To Symantec experts...

Floating_Red I never said that the detection signatures were useless, what I say is causing a time when the malware is not detected and for which can damage the equipment. This would not happen if we implement a smart detection system based on behavior. And given the level of current hardware, I do not think this kind of technology will cause a lot of slowdown in a modern computer with multiple cores processor and over 3 GB of RAM

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RavenMacDaddy
Posts: 669
Registered: ‎07-15-2008

Re: To Symantec experts...

[ Edited ]
Yeah, it's a shame the SONAR behavior blocker isn't capable of detecting new variants of the rogues... It can be effective against some other totally new viruses, but then you don't know how long the malware infection has come, and it's definitely not against all. Just tested running the first crack with malware in it seen on a torrent site for NIS09 in the purpose of testing something for a Wilders discussion. SONAR wouldn't do a thing. The FIRST result returned on the torrent site for the search term. Yes, it was a new infection, but that's what SONAR is for... I thought generic signatures were already implemented (and probably have been for quite some time?), considering all the topics about Generic.200 infections? Are the rogues not detectable through generic signatures? They still seem to be the same rogue programs (well, except for the new being released, but that's not all the time - often it's changes of the same rogues).
Message Edited by RavenMacDaddy on 03-16-2009 08:50 PM
Symantec Employee
orla_cox
Posts: 29
Registered: ‎04-08-2008

Re: To Symantec experts...

Hi Serekantum

 

We have a number of methods we can adopt to provide detection against malware. You explicitly call out behaviour-based detections which is something we adopted a number of years back using our SONAR engine. While behavioural detections have their advantages in proactively detecting new threats, we are still not in a place where we can solely rely on behavioural methodologies. Signature-based detections offer some advantages over behavoural detections as they are more specific and as a result are less prone to false positives aswell as offering better performance. Signature-based detections these days are also not simply one-to-one detections, in fact we will always choose the signature which offers the broadest potential coverage.

We also develop a number of heuristic signatures which are designed to detect particular charateristics associated with malware. You mention Packed.Generic.200 which has been very successful in proactively detecting malware associated with downloading misleading antivirus products. Regarding polymorphic threats, we have a specific engine which allows us to emulate the behaviour of such complex threats and allow us to effectively detect and repair them. A recent example of a complex polymorphic threat is W32.Virut.CF - we currently have full detection and repair in place for this threat's many iterations.

In general, with the volume and complexity of today's threats, an effective antivirus product needs to offer a combination of detection possibilities. We continue to investigate improvements to our behavioural engines, in addition to regularly creating heuristics and generic signature detections. If you look at the list here you'll see 6-7 new generic/heuristic detections released in the past month.

 

Regards

Orla 

Symantec Security Response

 

TomiRed
Posts: 874
Topics: 84
Kudos: 151
Solutions: 26
Registered: ‎06-19-2008

Re: To Symantec experts...

Unfortunately, I still don't feel safe to *test* what I know to be malware which would at the time of that testing still be undetected by Norton products.

 

The last 2-3 of times I did that the *test* resulted in a malicious process active and running on my system, creating hidden entries in the Run section of the registry, and so on and so on... 

 

Never in my 5 years of almost incidentally using Norton have I seen a SONAR (behavioral) alert and detection. I and my family rarely come across an infection accidentaly, so Norton seemed sufficient to me thus far.

 

Would you be so kind to explain to us where this SONAR analysis takes place? On our system or on some Symantec's test machine? And what is the timeframe for that?

Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1 -- NIS 2012>2013
TomiRed
Posts: 874
Topics: 84
Kudos: 151
Solutions: 26
Registered: ‎06-19-2008

Re: To Symantec experts...

Also an anecdote about repair..

 

A couple of times I came across an obvious USB flash disk (autorun) spreading malware, still undetected by Norton (09) version, when scanned manually.

 

I would take it out, leave it on one of my disk as an inactive file. My system would never be infected in the firts place.

 

A couple of days (or a week) after, the file is detected by NIS 09 as SillyFDC!

 

And NIS would then promptly ''clean'' my Registry of entries that did not even exist (because malware never got the chance to be active on my system). Funny. :D

 

 

Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1 -- NIS 2012>2013
dbrisendine
Posts: 5,562
Kudos: 1,282
Solutions: 263
Registered: ‎10-06-2008

Re: To Symantec experts...

I can confirm that SONAR detection takes place on your machine inside Norton products.  I have gotten several SONAR popups over the last year and have always done analysis on the suspected files.  Some are normal files that are used in compiling software (I program many different types of control systems) but some have been dubious at best and my system does not miss them.  I would say that out of the two products that I know have SONAR routines that NIS2009 is 'tighter' in its' control that N360.
TomiRed
Posts: 874
Topics: 84
Kudos: 151
Solutions: 26
Registered: ‎06-19-2008

Re: To Symantec experts...

We don't really know, you see, even the generic and heuristic detections rely on some kind of downloaded signature, it seems to me.

 

Either it is a packer (a compression utility) that only malware authors use (those are these Packed.Generic detections), or it looks very much like a trojan in its code inside (Generic.Trojan)

 

What I haven't seen from Norton is a kind of alert that would stop a process from downloading, dropping and executing files, creating a hidden file in a system directory, a hidden entry in the Run section and the like...even if it is not described in any of those by-the-looks-of-the-file based detections..

 

Except maybe if Suspicious.MH960 is a precursor for such detections... 

Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1 -- NIS 2012>2013