Another Mac Trojan found in torrented Adobe CS4 crack
Intego today reported another Trojan found in widely circulating in Mac Bittorrents. Last week it was the iWork torrent. This time it is with the Adobe CS4 Serial Cracker (not the DVD image installer itself). If you don't torrent software, at this point you have nothing to worry about. From Intego:
Exploit: OSX.Trojan.iServices.B Trojan Horse
Discovered: January 25, 2009
Risk: Serious
Description: Intego has discovered a new variant of the iServices Trojan horse that the company discovered on January 22, 2009. This new Trojan horse, OSX.Trojan.iServices.B, like the previous version, is found in pirated software distributed via BitTorrent trackers and other sites containing links to pirated software. OSX.Trojan.iServices.B Trojan horse is found bundled with copies of Adobe Photoshop CS4 for Mac. The actual Photoshop installer is clean, but the Trojan horse is found in a crack application that serializes the program.
After downloading this version of Photoshop, users will run the crack application to be able to use it. The crack application extracts an executable from its data, than installs a backdoor in /var/tmp/, a directory which is not deleted when the computer is restarted. (If the user runs the crack application again, the Trojan horse creates a new executable with a different name; these random names make it harder to ensure safe removal of the malware.)
The crack application then requests an administrator password, launching the backdoor with root privileges. This copies the executable to /usr/bin/DivX, then creates a startup item in /System/Library/StartupItems/DivX. The program checks to see if it has been launched with root privileges, then saves the root hash password in the file /var/root/.DivX. It listens on a random TCP port, and answers requests such as GET / HTTP/1.0 by sending a 209-byte packet, and makes repeated connections to two IP addresses.
Next, the crack application opens a disk image which is hidden in its resource folder, in a folder named .data, and proceeds to crack the Photoshop program, allowing it to be used.

Since the malicious software connects to a remote server over the Internet, the creator of this malware will be alerted that this Trojan horse is installed on different Macs, and will have the ability to connect to them and perform various actions remotely. The Trojan horse may also download additional components to an infected Mac.
Intego is issuing this alert to warn Mac users not to download Photoshop CS4 installers from sites offering pirated software. (As of 6 am EST, nearly 5,000 people have downloaded this installer, according to a major BitTorrent tracker site.) Since the Trojan horse, in this case, is found merely in the crack application that is bundled with Photoshop CS4, users should avoid downloading any cracking software from sites that distribute pirated software. The risk of infection is serious, due to the number of infected users, and these users may face extremely serious consequences if their Macs are accessible to malicious users. The first version of this Trojan horse was seen downloading new code to infected computers, which were then used in a DDoS (distributed denial of service) attack on certain web sites. Since this new variant uses the same technology, and contacts the same remote servers, it is likely that it will attempt to download new code and perform such actions.
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Comments (14)
Moral of the story. Don't Pirate Software.
"Now, I don't want to get off on a rant here, but..." - Dennis Miller
Good riddance to software pirates.
Any details on whether simply disabling remote login fixes this?
(Just for the record, I am thoroughly against pirated software.)
I'm not one to pirate a lot.. There are a few programs which I have from **cough** unofficial means... However, this isn't apparently on ALL versions, and there are several torrents of CS4 around.. Me thinks it's time to turn in the unofficial software getting genes.....
how long till people continue to ridicule the mac populace who don't pay the $400 or more for some programs....
Hmm- why Intego? This company sniff out the second trojan in the space of a week? Bit of a coincidence me thinks! Laurent Marteau CEO? I wouldn't trust this geezer with my granny, the bloke even looks like a crook! Perhaps this is Intego's marketing strategy to get through the impending recession? Ho-hum....
fwiw, I know many people who have downloaded CS4 and haven't got this trojan, I suppose until now..... but then again, serves them right if they did get one! Pixelmator- its got a great future! ;) :D
This is the really only way to GET viruses and trojans to infect Mac OS X machines. You need to approve the installation of the Malware. It's not exploiting a security flaw in the OS itself, its exploiting the security flaw in the CHAIR INFRONT of the Mac.
"Now, I don't want to get off on a rant here, but..." - Dennis Miller
How exactly does Intego get this information--before anyone else? Very suspicious IMO.
I do not believe none of this.
So what you are saying is that you believe all of it?
If you DONT believe in NONE of if, than you believe in ALL or Some of it...
I don't want to go off on a rant here...
Can we at least just agree that while stealing a piece of software is wrong and illegal anyone who writes a virus to infect others is probably in to beastiality and necrophilia and abuses himself/herself in dark lonely rooms?
I find it suspicious that these viruses come along just as Apple sees a fall in sales! Could it be that Jobs put these viruses in to increase sales =)
It ain't a virus if you have to manually install it. A virus self installs and automatically replicates to other machines.
Why is it suspicious that they (intego) found these trojans? Its their job. I'm sure that after finding the first one that it was rather easy to find others seeing as how they use the same file names and folder directories.
It's only their job if they get paid to find these things in the wild. Somehow I doubt there is any money in this "discovery".