Friday, November 09, 2007

Yet Another Malware Outbreak Monitor

Such early warning security events systems always come as handy research tools for security analysts and reporters, and it's great to see that more and more vendors are continuing to share interactive threats data in real-time, type of data that used to be proprietary one several years ago. Commtouch's recently announced Malware Outbreak Center is another step in the right direction of intelligence data sharing, and building more transparency on emerging spam and malware outbreaks :

"The Commtouch Malware Outbreak Center displays a sample of email-borne malware that has recently been detected and blocked by Commtouch's Zero-Hour(TM) Virus Outbreak Protection solution. It also incorporates data from AV-Test.org, an independent third-party organization that tests most of the commercially available anti-virus scanners. This data enables the Center to publish comparative detection times for leading AV vendors, a first in this comprehensive format which includes malware variant checksum. Detection times are critical, since individual virus variants often peak and then nearly disappear, all in under three hours. IT managers now have access to an online tool that allows them to verify their AV vendor's performance for each new outbreak, and to download comparative data per malware variant."

Zero day DIY malware, and open source one undermine the reactive response time's model, but without anti virus signatures in 2007 your company and customers would still be getting infected by outdated Netsky samples - it's a fact, yet not the panacea of dealing with malware, and has never been. Another important issue that deserves to be discussed is the issue with the virus outbreak time of different vendors in Stormy Wormy times for instance. In the past, vendors were even using their detection in the wild, and on-the-fly binary obfuscation which in times of open source malware results in countless number of variants. Good PR is vital, and so is gaining competitive advatange in the minds of prospective customers by positioning the company among the first to have responded to the outbreak, but it raises the issue on the degree of exchanging malware samples between the vendors themselves, and the lack of transparency here. The way initiatives in the form of honeyfarms contributing hundreds of malware samples, and "wisdom of crowds" end users filling the gaps in reactive response indirectly protect millions of customers on behalf of anti virus software, in this very same way exchanging malware samples in the shortest possible time frame, ultimately benefits each and every customer and organization that's having an anti virus in its perimeter defense strategy.

A non-profit honeyfarm can collect hundreds of thousands of undetected malware samples in a single month, let's speculate that it could even outperform a small AV vendor's malware aggregation capabilities. In the anti virus industry, branding is crucial and therefore the non-profit honeyfarm cannot enter the market, instead, it's only incentive to donate the samples to the anti virus vendors is that of social responsibility. AVs should build more awareness on the importance of malware samples sharing among them, compared to pitching themselves as the vendor who first picked up the outbreak and protected its customers. Bargaining with someone's upcoming infection isn't that much of a success if you think about it. "Hey that signature is mine" days should have been over by now.

Moreover, it's a basic principle of every competitive market that the more competition, the more choices the customer would have, thereby making vendors innovate or cease to exist in irrelevance. Does the same apply to the anti virus market? Can we have a built-to-flip honeyfarm into an anti virus vendor to be later on acquired and integrated within a company's existing products portfolio? Let's hope not, and it's doubtful as there's a difference between an anti virus software and an "anti virus software", at least from the perspective that the second "anti virus software" may be occupying markets that could have otherwise been served by a better market proposition. Product development of an AV courtesy of a security vendor's products portfolio given the vendor realized that a huge percentage of security spending goes to perimeter defense solutions can be tricky, and even if acquisition has taken place you'd better stick to a company whose core competency is anti virus solutions.

Still Living in the Perimeter Defense World?

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