Hi,

IT administrators affected by the flawed antivirus update pushed out on 21
April by 
McAfee<http://www.eweekeurope.co.uk/comment/mcafee-apologies-are-not-enough-6592>may
have a lot of work ahead of them cleaning up computers. But there are
some lessons to be learned from the fiasco that admins should file away for
the future, experts told eWEEK.

IT operations for a number of organisations were disrupted when McAfee
pushed out a .dat file update for its antivirus
products<http://www.eweekeurope.co.uk/news/mcafee-update-breaks-windows-xp-systems-6594>.
The buggy update, which was meant to address an attack targeting Windows
PCs, incorrectly identified svchost.exe as a Windows virus detected as
W32/wecorl.a, and affected computers running Windows XP Service Pack 3.

According to McAfee, .5 percent of its corporate customers were impacted,
and an even smaller percentage of customers of its consumer products were
hit as well. But among those enterprise users were police, hospitals and
universities whose XP computers downloaded the file and were greeted with a
Blue Screen or DCOM error, followed by shutdown messages.

For organisations, the moral here may be to take a more cautious approach to
applying antivirus updates. But doing so can open up its own can of worms,
noted Jason Miller, data and security team manager at Shavlik Technologies.
Test Files Before Rolling Them Out

“Deploying AV updates can be quite challenging given that antivirus
definition files are extremely time-sensitive,” Miller said. ”The longer IT
administrators wait to deploy new definition files, the more likely user
machines are vulnerable to the last viruses. In addition, antivirus vendors
typically release multiple definition files daily. A good practice is to
test the new definition files as they become available before rolling them
out to the network, but this may not be feasible for all companies due to
the frequency of the updates and testing time.”

Many organisations will first bring updated signature files, AV updates and
patches into a safe sandbox for internal testing and validation, said Peter
Schlampp, vice president of marketing and product management at Solera
Networks.

“This sandbox would represent the general makeup of the overall
organization—various operating systems, various versions, hardware
[configurations], etc.,” Schlampp said. “By exposing a select number of
machines to the updates, they get an idea of how the systems will respond to
the updates. Only after this internal validation will they then coordinate
the updates throughout the entire organisation.”

The incident will make many think twice about moving to a
“cloud<http://www.eweekeurope.co.uk/comment/every-ash-cloud-has-a-green-it-lining-6567>-based”
update system in which PCs just accept an automatic push of updates from AV
vendors without any gating by enterprise IT, opined Gartner analyst John
Pescatore.
Cloud-based Updates

While Pescatore characterised McAfee’s response as quick and properly
apologetic, he compared the original mistake to an aspirin company providing
pills that end up causing headaches. “This one incident doesn’t really mean
we need to go back to what was common five years ago, i.e. fully QA-ing
[quality assurance testing] every signature update before pushing out,”
Pescatore said. “However, waiting a few hours to see if anyone else reports
problems before you push out, or at least simple QA on the standard
supported corporate image through a reboot, is still a prudent approach.”

In an additional twist, ESET reports that attackers have begun poisoning
search engine results to lead unsuspecting victims looking for information
about the situation to sites pushing rogue antivirus software. “Juraj
Malcho, our head of lab in Bratislava, reports that in a
Google<http://www.eweekeurope.co.uk/tag/google>search … he got three
malicious hits in the top 10 … and 11 in the top 20,”
blogged David Harley, ESET’s director of malware intelligence. “Subsequent
searches using different search strings are finding even more hits, so right
now, Google is well and truly poisoned.”

McAfee published a tool earlier on 22 April that suppresses the driver
causing the false positive by applying an Extra.dat file and restoring the
svchost.exe. Organisations looking for information about workarounds and
fixes can find it here.

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