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Gigabyte + Windows 7 8 & 10 Are At Risk! - kyonides - 02-09-2020 Ransomware installs Gigabyte driver
to kill antivirus products It has been reported that a ransomware gang, those that encrypt your sensitive stuff and ask you for a fee to decrypt it (if they ever do it), has found another method to vulnerate your PC if your motherboard chipset belongs to Gigabyte. ![]() ![]() https://www.zdnet.com/article/ransomware-installs-gigabyte-driver-to-kill-antivirus-products/ ZDNet wrote Wrote:In a report published late last night, Sophos described this new technique as follows: Basically what it says is that they manage to connect to your home network (by hacking your WiFi or your router?) and then place a driver that impersonates the usual Gigabyte driver. Nope, it's not like they care about your security. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ZDNet wrote Wrote:For this debacle, two parties are at fault -- first Gigabyte, and then Verisign. Now you know how exactly you've ended up fearing when that massive and terrible data loss might ever happen. ![]() ZDNet wrote Wrote:The company's downright refusal to recognize the vulnerability led the researchers who found the bug to publish public details about this bug, along with proof-of-concept code to reproduce the vulnerability. This public proof-of-concept code gave attackers a roadmap to exploiting the Gigabyte driver. Well, usually whenever a programmer demonstrates that some piece of code is vulnerable, the companies involved in that mess do something to remedy it... except for Gigabyte! ![]() Of course, hackers like those living in North Korea or Iran or probably China as well are now fully aware of this epic fail and can now target as many affected Gigabyte based PC's as possible. ![]() Verisign, a company in charge of driver security certificates, could have invalidated the driver's certificate as a way to tell Windows it's unsafe... but they just ignored the issue as well. ![]() Keep in mind there are other variants of this kind of cyber attack that may even reboot your PC to enter safe mode and make sure you can't run any antivirus software! ![]() What I'd usually recommend you here would be to do any of the following:
The following section applies only to other variants of this cyberattack Sadly ![]() ![]() RE: Gigabyte + Windows 7 8 & 10 Are At Risk! - MetalRenard - 02-09-2020 My old PC uses a Gigabyte mobo and I haven't booted for 3 years now. It never managed to run Windows 10 (it would auto-corrupt every time I tried and microsoft couldn't fix it) so it's still on 7. I guess I'll have to update it if I ever use it again. RE: Gigabyte + Windows 7 8 & 10 Are At Risk! - DerVVulfman - 02-09-2020 Dialup for the win! RE: Gigabyte + Windows 7 8 & 10 Are At Risk! - kyonides - 02-09-2020 I'm sorry to tell you this, Wulfo, but your connection speed isn't a real advantage if it starts downloading the drivers while you're AFK. ![]() RE: Gigabyte + Windows 7 8 & 10 Are At Risk! - DerVVulfman - 02-09-2020 Assuming you have GDRV.SYS, the hacker's back door into your system.... .... which I don't. ![]() RE: Gigabyte + Windows 7 8 & 10 Are At Risk! - kyonides - 02-09-2020 O_o? I think you haven't read the part where they infiltrate your local network to install that GDRV.SYS driver on your PC... Even if you just use a dial up modem, how often has AOL updated its drivers? When was the last time they replaced the modem? RE: Gigabyte + Windows 7 8 & 10 Are At Risk! - DerVVulfman - 02-10-2020 Ahh... I use a simple USB modem. And it cannot support Gigabyte. Research is fun. |