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| Subject: | RE: Extracting signature snippets from AV databases |
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| Date: | Tue, 9 May 2006 10:55:14 -0500 |
Bill, I'd suggest you look at behavior rather than just signatures. You'll always be playing catch-up if you base your defensive abilities solely on signatures. That being said, AV companies have long been willing to share their malware collections with one another. Spyware companies on the other hand, regard their signatures as intellectual property. Also, I suspect many folks will NOT be happy with you if you reverse-engineer their software to extract meaningful information. For spyware behavior, take a look at the SPYCAR test suite, named in honor of the EICAR test program. The Ed Skoudis and Tom Liston of Inteliguardians (http://www.intelguardians.com/) cooked up a test suite of spyware-like programs to review spyware detection abilities of certain AV products for Infomation Security magazine. Anyway, it's now at www.spycar.org. Bill... -----Original Message----- From: Bill Stout [mailto:bill.stout@greenborder.com] Sent: Monday, May 08, 2006 3:37 PM To: focus-virus@securityfocus.com Subject: Extracting signature snippets from AV databases I'd like to create a set of test files containing (harmless) virus (and spyware) signatures. Can I extract the signatures from AV databases (every PC has one)? I'm thinking open source AV database may be easier to extract signatures from than a commercial AV database. If I can automate the extraction and file creation, files won't become stale because of lag time due to fluxuating interest of the maintainer (me). Has this been done already? Are specific signatures a 'secret sauce'? The primary purpose is to create a test that safely verifies that our browser protection product absolutely protects a computer from intentional infection. Thanks, Bill Stout www.greenborder.com
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