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Gozi Trojan leads to Russian data hoard
Jaikumar Vijayan
March 20, 2007 (Computerworld) A Russian Trojan program named Gozi that remained largely undetected for more than 50 days earlier this year has stolen more than 10,000 records containing confidential information belonging to about 5,200 home users.
The compromised information included about 2,000 Social Security numbers, account numbers, user names and passwords that the individuals used to log into bank accounts as well as online retail and e-commerce sites.
The stolen data also included employee log-in information to applications from more than 300 companies and government organizations -- including several law enforcement agencies at the federal and state level -- as well as medical information of health care employees and patients whose usernames and passwords were compromised via their home PCs.
All of the information was sent by Gozi to a server in
Details of the Trojan and the stolen information were uncovered in January by Don Jackson, a security researcher at SecureWorks Inc., an Atlanta-based managed security service provider.
According to
An analysis of the Trojan program showed that it was designed to steal data from encrypted Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) streams and send it to a server based in
The server to which the information was being sent had a very professional-looking front end that allowed users to log into individual accounts, view indexed data and get results from queries based on certain fields such as URL and form parameters. Each customer-generated query had a price associated with it,
When
Details of the Trojan and the information on the Russian server have been passed on to law enforcement authorities, and to several of the affected companies,

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