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Message-ID: <200309161959.h8GJxMA9062434@mailserver2.hushmail.com>
From: auto9115 at hushmail.com (auto9115@...hmail.com)
Subject: Exploiting Multiple Flaws in Symantec Antivirus 2004 for Windows Mobile
Exploiting Multiple Flaws in Symantec Antivirus 2004 for Windows Mobile
Version tested: 3.0.0.194 (latest version)
Date: Sept. 13, 2003
Background: Viruses have started to show up on Personal Data Assistants
(PDAs) and handheld wireless devices. Although there are currently no
viruses in the wild that infect the Windows CE operating system, may
companies have released virus scanners for Windows Mobile (formerly PocketPC).
Examples include PC-cillin, Airscanner, F-secure, and McAfee. Since
McAfee was recently selected to go OEM on all new Dell Axim handhelds,
Symantec scrambled to get a product out. They have just released their
final version (available for $39.99 for a one year license), but unfortunately,
in the scramble to release it they apparently forgot to test it to see
if it is working ;)
Vulnerability #1: Real-time scanning appears to not work.
Symantec is currently the only AV company that claims to do real-time
scanning in the background on Windows CE. This claim gives them a significant
market advantage. However, we can see that it is not true real-time
scanning. For example, if the scanner is active in memory and you open
the famous Eicar test virus (eicar.exe) into RAM, the scanner does not
detect it. It is not until you "save" a copy of a file with the Eicar
to your file system does Symantec detect it. So it is not real-time
scanning of viral code, but rather just a simple monitor to activate
a scan any time a file is saved. Therefore, this does not protect against
hostile code active in RAM.
Vulnerability #2: The Virus scanner does not appear to work at all!
Like any antivirus scanner, Symantec detects the Eicar test virus (eicar.exe
or eicar.txt). At least, at first glance it appears to detect it. However,
you can easily defeat this by adding a few bytes of random text before
or after the Eicar string. For example, if you use a hex/text editor
to add a few random bytes of text before and after the string, then Symantec
won't detect it! However, other AVs easily detect it, as they should.
An AV scanner should be able to detect a byte stream anywhere in the
file, but Symantec is easily bypassed with this rudimentary trick.
These exploits have not been submitted to Bugtraq, since that mailing
list is now owned by Symantec, and they have more "selective" full disclosure
than this list.
Don Cheatham
Wireless Network Engineer
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