Email from 'Citibank' conceals Trojan

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An email purporting to be from Citibank carries a Trojan virus that plants a back door on an infected computer, allowing a hacker to use the machine as a channel for other activities on the Internet.

Email-security company MessageLabs on Wednesday afternoon reported the new email virus, which has been dubbed Troj/Downloader!4c52 or Downloader-DI.

The first copies of the email have come from Australia, with more than 400 copies spotted so far, according to the company.

The attachment is named www.citybankhomeloan.htm.pif. Once clicked, the Trojan attempts to download a further component from a free hosting website located in Russia.

After activation, this Trojan copies itself to the Windows System folder and installs a .DLL file, which enables the Trojan to acts as a proxy server, allowing a hacker to channel Internet activities through the infected computer without the recipient's knowledge, according to MessageLabs.

The channel between the remote computer and the infected computer is encrypted.

Any activity that the hacker carries out on the Internet, if traced back, will show the address of the infected PC.

The Trojan arrives as an attachment to an email that seemed to have been spammed from a number of different IP addresses around the world.

The attachment has a double extension ending in .htm.pif. The sender's email address is forged, and does not indicate the true identity of the sender, said MessageLabs.

The message contains:

From: "Account Manager"
Subject: Re: Your credit application
Text:
Dear Sir!|
Thank you for your online application for a Home Equity Loan.
In order to be approved for any loan application we pull your Credit Profile and Chexsystems information, which didn't satisfy our minimum needs. Consequently, we regret to say that we cannot approve you for Home Equity Loan at this time.
*Attached are copy of your Credit Profile and Your Application that you submitted with us. Please take a close look at it, you will receive hard copy by mail withing [sic] next few days.

As of Wednesday afternoon, CNETAsia has not received alerts about the virus from other security companies.

Talkback

I am a novice when it comes to Trojan horses, but if I understand this right a Trojan communicates its "payload" back to it's client through an irc , an icq or e-mail, or some similar medium.
Is it possible to put sniffers on servers to see this type of activity or does the traffic coming from the Trojan, look inoccuous, or indisernable from standard traffic?

via Facebook 23 November, 2003 07:04
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