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Re: Write-protect sctors?

Subject: Re: Write-protect sctors?
Date: Mon, 28 Aug 2006 18:44:17 +0200
Hi Scott,

did you consider the possibility that the bad sector was not caused by
the rootkit? It's not uncommon that a disc contains bad sectors, which
you only remark when you actually read such a sector (or the whole disc,
e.g. dd it to another disc). Try to low-level format the disc after
investigating the incident.

Another possibility is some SMART-related function, but that is pure
speculation, as I don't know too much about these features.

Cheers & good luck cleaning up,
Florian

scott wrote:
I had a probable rootkit in ubuntu dapper that proved to be more
persistent than I thought possible.I did rkhunter and showed some
anomalies in /dev/...Trying to track those dir's down proved
elusive,even with root enabled(in ubuntu,root is disabled by default.You
can still sudo, but no su without certain switches,)the dir's
effectively hid from my view.
So I decided to reinstall a clean slate.This is when I encounter
problems that don't make sense.
As the install progresses to the partitioning of the disc,I opt for the
erase whole disc option.It progresses to a certain point and then quits
with an error..repeatedly.
I filed a bug report with launchpad,but my question is this:Can any
malware you are aware of write-protect certain segments of a HD,without
BIOS support?Or is there a BIOS trojan that I'm not aware of in Linux?Is
this even possible with a hardened system?
Is this even possible in any system,Windows included?
What I.m asking is : Can any malware write-protect sectors on a HD that
survive repartioning?
Sounds really crazy,huh?
Thanks,Scott


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