Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Alternative to CCleaner, after Chinese attempt to insert malware into CCleaner





CCleaner is again in the news, last time affecting millions successfully. 

Security researchers increasingly believe that an elite Chinese hacking group broke into Czech antivirus company Avast (which bought Piriform's CCleaner) to booby trap popular file cleaning program CCleaner, according to research and private analysis provided to CyberScoop.

The attempt was thrawted, but who knows if other were not detected. Why take the risk?


Full details from https://www.cyberscoop.com/ccleaner-attack-china-intezer-labs-piriform-apt17/




CCleaner Alternative

A great and free alternative is BleachBit a new open-source privacy cleaner tool. 

Download open source BleachBit at 
https://www.bleachbit.org/download/windows - choose portable unzip and run


Use 

I wrote a blog post on how to clean re-spawning Adobe cookies using BleachBit.
How to Delete Google Chrome Adobe Flash Cookies (.sol files) - Respawning Cookies


Monday, October 21, 2019

How to fix files that disguise malware wt Right-to-Left characters and Control Characters

In apps that support Unicode like Window Explorer, the right-to-left override malware method uses a RTL Unicode character, that will reverse the order of the characters that follow it. It's used mainly for Middle Eastern/Asian languages that you read right-to-left.

RTLO can be used to spoof fake extensions. To do this we need a hidden RTL Unicode character in the file name.

So in example below, the 2nd file looks like a ".txt" file, but is really a ".docx" file (the 1st file). The 1st file has been cleansed of the RTL Unicode character, and ends in ".docx".

The PDF file is actually an ".exe" file, but looks like it will open with default PDF reader. 

Download 
RTLExamples.7z  (it includes the above files,  an  .exe really disguised as ".PDF" example. The files contain no viruses or malware. The "PDF" is safe ".exe", and just opens this page in Chrome. But GDrive marks these examples "Sorry, this file is infected with a virus", which good because they are detecting the RTL character and exe. But it a false positive, since there is no virus in the files. You can create you own examples by inserting the RTL character into the filename, see this video https://youtu.be/n2kV3Q2eTCY). 

Download touchRTL.7z (you need https://www.7-zip.org/ to unpack), this is command line executable.
No malware or viruses of any kind, like rest of my tools.



Here's the same files as viewed from the command (cmd.exe) line. The box character represents the RTL character.


Note: Detection of malicious file is never done by a filename alone, so a good antivirus will flag the contents of this file, for known signatures. BUT you can remove the annoying RTL character with the free tool below! 

What is “Right-to-Left Override” RTLO?
The RTLO method is used to hide the true type of a file, so it might trick you into open text file (.txt) which really is a Word file (.docx) with malicious malware. More recently this file could hide a .wav file. Audio files such .wav file are being embedded with malware, is on the forefront of malware maliciousness. Read about that on my post here.
The method exploits a feature built into Windows Explorer. Since Microsoft Windows does a great job of supporting different languages from around the world, some of those languages that are written from right-to-left (RTL). 
Let’s say you want to use a right-to-left written language, like Hebrew or Arabic, on a site combined with a left-to-right written language like English or French. In this case, you would want bidirectional script support.
Bidirectional script support is the capability of a computer system to correctly display bi-directional text. In HTML we can use Unicode right-to-left marks and left-to-right marks to override the HTML bidirectional algorithm when it produces undesirable results:
left-to-right mark: ‎ (U+200E) Unicode character
right-to-left mark: ‏ (U+200F) Unicode character
How do you fix files that have the RTLO or other bad characters ? 

Here's a tool I built to clean up Right-to-Left Mark (and many others) and Unicode Control Characters from your files. It's super fast, small and written in native C++. 100% no malware or spyware of any kind. 

Download touchRTL.7z (you need https://www.7-zip.org/ to unpack) . Your browser may say this is unsafe, since any EXE that is downloaded raw or in an zip file is considered unsafe. Again, with all of my tools there 100% no malware. This is just one of many tools I provide on this blog.

Free for personal use, but will open this page.

To get touchPRO.7z, use contact form, Pro has flags to remove Unicode spaces and punctuations (math symbols, currency, open closing braces, and accent marks).  

Just run this command and it will recursively rename filenames to remove those characters under the specified directory name. If directory name, contains spaces you need quotes.


touchRTL -v -l -R "directory name"

where


Usage: touchRTL [-acdhlmprRtuvx] [-r REFFILE | -t TIME | -d DATETIME] FILE...

A FILE argument that does not exist is created empty, unless -c or --no-create
is supplied.

  -a, --access-time        change only the file access time
  -c, --no-create          do not create any new files - If the file exists, touch will update the access time, else will do nothing.
  -l, --RTL                remove Unicode control & format characters (esp. infamous right-to-left) from filename (ditto -u)
  -m, --modif-time         change only the file modification time
  -p, --pause-exit         pause on exit (non-GNU extra)
  -R, --recursive          recursively touch files in specified directory and all subdirectories (non-GNU extra)
  -u, --uni-cntrl-chars    remove Unicode control & format characters (esp. infamous right-to-left) from filename (ditto -l)
  -v, --verbose            output the result of every file processed (non-GNU extra)
  -x, --creation-time      change only the file creation time (non-GNU extra)
  -r, --reference REFFILE  use this file's times instead of current time

  -t, --time TIMESTAMP     use [[CC]YY]MMDDhhmm[.ss] instead of current time
                           Where
                            CC: First two digit of the year
                            YY: Last two digits of the year
                            MM: Month (two-digit numeric month)
                            DD: Day (two-digit numeric day i.e. day of month)
                            hh: Hour
                            mm: Minutes
                            ss: Seconds
                           [] indicates that field is optional

  -d, --date DATETIME      use YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss[.ms] instead of current time (non-GNU, does not parse string)
                           accepted "2033-04-01T07:07:07", "2033-04-01 07:07:07", "2033-04-01 07:07:07.1200"

  -h, --help               Display this help and exit.
  --version                Display version information and exit.

Note: -d and -t options accept different time-date formats.

Copyright © 2019 Metadata Consulting <metadataconsult@gmail.com> - https://metadataconsulting.ca/
Open source by Stephane Duguay <s@binarez.com> - https://www.binarez.com/touch_dot_exe/

Friday, October 18, 2019

Phishing emails harder to detect, now come with proper return email addresses

Spoofed e-mail messages just go harder to spot in your incoming mailbox. 

Normally you can spot a phishing email by the return address, which is usually fake. The dead giveaway is that it not the same as spoofing company they are trying fake. 

But there new technique just made this harder to spot. 



So if reply to this email, it will appear that it's going to dhlexpress@shipping.com as well. 

Solution

You have to now check individual links in the email or document (open online) to check if they are rogue URLs. 


Source: https://isc.sans.edu/diary/rss/25426