Re: newlist: public malware discussion [Re: Out of tree module using LSM]

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Jon Masters wrote:
On Mon, 2007-12-03 at 23:45 +0100, Bodo Eggert wrote:
Jon Masters <[email protected]> wrote:
On Thu, 2007-11-29 at 11:11 -0800, Ray Lee wrote:
On Nov 29, 2007 10:56 AM, Jon Masters <[email protected]> wrote:
To lift Alan's example, a naive first implementation
would be to create a suffix tree of all of ESR's works, then scan each
page on fault to see if there are any partial matches in the tree.
Ah, but I could write a sequence of pages that on their own looked
garbage, but in reality, when executed would print out a copy of the
Jargon File in all its glory. And if you still think you could look for
patterns, how about executable code that self-modifies in random ways
but when executed as a whole actually has the functionality of fetchmail
embedded within it? How would you guard against that?
You can't scan all possible code for malware:
Take a random piece of code, possibly halting. Replace all halting conditions
using a piece of malware. Scan it. If it were possible to detect the malware
without false positives, you'd have solved the halting problem.

Good. I think you got the point of my sarcasm. My *point* was that we
have two different camps of people here:

* Those who think some solution is better than none.

But we are talking about malicious programs, and so
there is a common motto:
"Poor Security Can Be Worse Than No Security", so
in this field often "none" is better that "some"

Really i don't understand why you push such module.
Malicious software in few generation (few years)
will use alternate methods. So the linux kernel
will be worse (and maybe will expose more bugs because
of complexity, and no problem are solved) but no
problem are solved.

See windoze: it is a patch after an other, so
the system is complex, unmaintainable and surely
not more secure. or do you want to change our behavior
as windows users: they compress files before to send
it, because of antiviruses policies.

If antiviruses will add security, we will not
have such big bot-nets and worms from the concurrent
OS.  Antiviruses offers only a short term cure.

ciao
	cate


* Those who want an unobtainable, perfect solution.

I'm not criticising, each has their position. However, I was attempting
to explain that I do fully "get it" by running through an example of how
to work around more elementary on-access scanning schemes. I know that
(no matter what marketing exists to the contrary), it is never possible
to have perfect anti-malware software. But I do think there is a time
and a place for Linux to help make some folks feel safer - on access
file scanning isn't evil, and you don't have to use it! Freedom! :-)

Having spoken to a few people, I've created the following mailing list,
so we can rant away and come up with a list of requirements to present
for further discussion. Note that this is a case where I actually expect
people to be *happy* with yet another email list :-)
http://lists.printk.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/malware-list

Please sign up, and encourage interested third parties to do so too.
Let's work this all out. Then I'll come back sometime over the holidays
with a summary and some followup.

If I had to design a virus scanner interface, I'd e.g. create a library*
providing an {open|mmap}_and_scan() function that would give me a clean
copy/really-private mapping of a scanned file, and a scan_{blob,file}()
function that would scan a block of memory/a file.

Although I'm open to the idea, I'm almost 100% convinced that nobody is
going to buy modifying userspace applications one at a time. I think
there is a legitimate feeling of this needing to be massaged by the
kernel on some level. But I might be wrong - don't flame me.

Jon.
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