User:Mitjakolsek/Binary planting

In computer network security, Binary planting is a general term for an attack where the attacker places (i.e., plants) a binary file containing malicious code to some local or remote file system location in order for a vulnerable application to load and execute it.

There can be various reasons why an application would load a malicious binary:


 * 1) Insecure access permissions on a local directory allow a local attacker to plant the malicious binary in a trusted location. (A typical example is an application installer not properly setting access permissions on application directories.)
 * 2) One application may be used for planting a malicious binary in another application's trusted location. (An example is the Internet Explorer - Safari blended threat vulnerability)
 * 3) The application searches for a binary in untrusted locations, possibly on remote file systems. (A typical example is a Windows application loading a dynamic link library from the current working directory after the latter has been set to a network shared folder.)

Insecure Access Permissions

 * 1) A Windows application installer creates a root directory (C:\Application) and installs the application in it, but fails to limit write access to the directory for non-privileged users.
 * 2) Suppose the application (C:\Application\App.exe) loads the WININET.DLL library by calling LoadLibrary("WININET.DLL"). This library is expected to be found in the Windows System32 folder.
 * 3) Local user A plants a malicious WININET.DLL library in C:\Application
 * 4) Local user B launches the application, which loads and executes the malicious WININET.DLL instead of the legitimate one.

Current Working Directroy-based Attack

 * 1) Suppose a Windows application loads the DWMAPI.DLL library by calling LoadLibrary("DWMAPI.DLL"). This library is expected to be found in the Windows System32 folder, but only exists on Windows Vista and Windows 7.
 * 2) Suppose the application is associated with the ".bp" file extension.
 * 3) The attacker sets up a network shared folder and places files honeypot.bp and DWMAPI.DLL in this folder (possibly marking the latter as hidden).
 * 4) The attacker invites a Windows XP user to visit the shared folder with Windows Explorer.
 * 5) When the user double-clicks on honeypot.bp, user's Windows Explorer sets the current working directory to the remote share and launches the application for opening the file.
 * 6) The application tries to load DWMAPI.DLL, but failing to find it in the Windows system directories, it loads and executes it from the attacker's network share.