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Bamital Bites the Dust 

Feb 06, 2013 02:09 PM

Today we are pleased to announce the successful takedown of the Bamital botnet. Symantec has been tracking this botnet since late 2009 and recently partnered with Microsoft to identify and shut down all known components vital to the botnet's operation.

Bamital is a malware family whose primary purpose is to hijack search engine results, redirecting clicks on these results to an attacker controlled command-and-control (C&C) server. The C&C server redirects these search results to websites of the attackers' choosing. Bamital also has the ability to click on advertisements without user interaction. This results in poor user experience when using search engines along with an increased risk of further malware infections.

Bamital’s origin can be tracked back to late 2009 and has evolved through multiple variations over the past couple of years. Bamital has primarily propagated through drive-by-downloads and maliciously modified files in peer-to-peer (P2P) networks. From analysis of a single Bamital C&C server over a six-week period in 2011 we were able to identify over 1.8 million unique IP addresses communicating with the server, and an average of three million clicks being hijacked on a daily basis. Recent information from the botnet shows the number of requests reaching the C&C server to be well over one million per day.

Clickfraud, the name used for the type of fraud committed by Bamital, is the process of a human or automated script emulating online user behavior and clicking on online advertisements for monetary gain. Bamital redirected end users to ads and content which they did not intend to visit. It also generated non-human initiated traffic on ads and websites with the intention of getting paid by ad networks. Bamital was also responsible for redirecting users to websites peddling malware under the guise of legitimate software. The following video illustrates how Bamital exploits the online advertising model:

Default Chromeless Player

Bamital is just one of many botnets that utilize clickfraud for monetary gain and to foster other cybercrime activities. Many of the attackers behind these schemes feel they are low risk as many users are unaware that their computers are being used for these activities. This takedown sends a message to those attackers that these clickfraud operations are being monitored and can be taken offline.

For further details on Bamital's activities you can download a copy of our whitepaper.

Details on recovering from a Bamital infection are available here: http://www.norton.com/bamital. Users of Symantec security products with current definitions are already protected against Bamital and its variants.

Symantec Security Response would like to acknowledge Spain's Civil Guardia, Catalunyan CERT (CESICAT), and Microsoft for assisting us in understanding and ultimately bringing this botnet to its demise.

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