DISCLAIMER: Logging other people's keystrokes or breaking
into other people's computer without their permission can
be considered illegal by the courts of many countries.
The monitoring software reviewed here is ONLY for authorized
system administrators and/or owners of computers.
We assume no liability and are not responsible for any misuse
or damage caused by the keylogging software. The end user of
this software is obliged to obey all applicable local, state,
federal and other laws in his country of residence.
December 24th, 2007
 Russians close to prosecuting 'Pinch' Trojan authors
Russia may soon prosecute the authors of the "Pinch" Trojan, an easy-to-use malicious software program available on the Internet that steals a variety of data.
Nikolay Patrushev, who heads Russia's Federal Security Services, said earlier this week that Pinch's authors had been identified and would be taken to court, according to a blog posting by Russian security vendor Kaspersky Lab.
Kaspersky said the arrest of the Pinch writers, identified as Ermishkin and Farkhutdinov, would be on the same level as the 2005 prosecution of German Sven Jaschan for creating the NetSky and Sasser worms, which caused thousands of infected computers to crash worldwide.
With Pinch, ‘it's impossible to estimate what financial losses have been caused over the years since this Trojan first saw the light of day,’ Kaspersky said.
Pinch's sellers would customize the program for buyers and offer support, illustrating a growing underground economy for hacking tools, Kaspersky said.
Thousands of versions of Pinch, which comes in Russian and English language versions, are still circulating on the Internet. Kaspersky said its security software can detect some 4,000 variants of Pinch, where the basic code is the same but aspects of the program have been modified in order to evade detection by security software.
Pinch has a highly developed user interface that can be used for sorting information it steals off other computers, according to F-Secure.
It can steal e-mail account passwords, pilfer other password information stored in the Internet Explorer, Firefox and Opera browsers, and snap screenshots.
That stolen information can also be encrypted before it is sent back to the hacker, according to Panda Security, another security vendor.
Pinch could also be customized to have the victimized computer join a botnet, or a network of computers set up to hide other malicious activity by the hacker. Botnets are often used to send spam or mount other hacking attacks.
Source: INFOWORLD
All news for December, 2008 All news for 2008 year All news for 2007 year All news for 2006 year All news for 2005 year All news for 2004 year
DONATION: Keylogger.org is an independent research
project supported by a team of enthusiasts. If you find this
project useful or would like to help foster its continued
development please consider making a donation using PayPal`s
online secure payment service. A PayPal account is not required.
All major credit cards are accepted (MasterCard/Eurocard,
Visa/Delta/Electron, American Express, Switch/Maestro, Solo).
Simply click the button below.
Any amount would be useful and appreciated!
Thanks in advance for your support!
|