According to Symantec it doesn't know if the system has already been
infected until it is running on the target machine, at which point the RPC
crash is imminent. It shouldn't re-infect, but further attempts from other
infected hosts will cause random reboots.
On the plus side this one will be much easier to clean up than CodeRed,
Nimda, etc. Random J. Clueless might actually look for patches if his box is
rebooting on a regular basis.
-Mike
---
Michael Damm, MIS Department, Irwin Research & Development
V: 509.457.5080 x298 F: 509.577.0301 E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-----Original Message-----
From: Drew Weaver [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, August 11, 2003 2:53 PM
To: 'Mike Damm'
Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: RPC errors
Its bloody gorgeous too, my girlfriend's pc rebooted like 9 times,
apparently the worm doesn't check to see if its already infected.
-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Damm [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, August 11, 2003 5:27 PM
To: 'Jack Bates'; NANOG
Subject: RE: RPC errors
The DCOM exploit that is floating around crashes the Windows RPC service
when the attacker closes the connection to your system after a successful
attack. Best bet is to assume any occurrence of crashing RPC services to be
signs of a compromised system until proven otherwise.
http://www.cert.org/advisories/CA-2003-19.html
-Mike
---
Michael Damm, MIS Department, Irwin Research & Development
V: 509.457.5080 x298 F: 509.577.0301 E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-----Original Message-----
From: Jack Bates [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, August 11, 2003 1:12 PM
To: NANOG
Subject: RPC errors
I'm showing signs of an RPC sweep across one of my networks that's
killing some XP machines (only XP confirmed). How wide spread is this at
this time. Also, does anyone know if this is just generating a DOS
symptom or if I should be looking for backdoors in these client systems?
-Jack