Thursday, March 29, 2007

CarderIM - Encrypted IM for Carders

Via ComputerWorld.com -

March 28, 2007 (IDG News Service) -- Hackers have built their own encrypted instant-message (IM) program to shield themselves from law enforcement trying to spy on their communication channels.

The application, called CarderIM, is a sophisticated tool hackers are using to sell information such as credit-card numbers or e-mail addresses, part of an underground economy dealing in financial data, said Andrew Moloney, business director for financial services for RSA, part of EMC Corp., during a presentation at the International e-crime Congress in London on Wednesday.

CarderIM exemplifies the increased effort hackers are making to obscure their activities while continuing to use the Internet as a means to communicate with other criminals. "They're even investing in their own custom tools, their own places to work," Moloney said.

CarderIM's logo is humorous: two overlapping half suns in the same red-and-yellow tones as MasterCard International Inc.'s logo. The name, CarderIM, is a reference to the practice of "carding," or converting stolen credit-card details into cash or goods.

Often, the hackers who obtain credit-card numbers aren't interested in trying to convert the data into cash. But other people are. On the Internet, the two can meet. But the data buyers and sellers are constantly on the lookout for the "rippers" -- security experts or police who are gathering data on them, Moloney said.

It's not known how widely CarderIM is being used, but its distribution appears to be limited, Moloney said. Searches through Google uncover a few passing but incomplete references to the program. It's also not easy to find a copy of it.

"To get ahold of it [CarderIM] you need to be part of one of the trusted groups, which we have agents within," Moloney said.

During his presentation, Moloney showed a screenshot of an advertisement for CarderIM, which addressed the need to "secure the scene." The application supposedly uses encrypted servers that are "offshore" and does not record IM conversations.

Hackers may have needed a more secure IM application, since most of the free ones, such as ICQ, transmit messages in clear text, which can be intercepted, Moloney said.

"They know that we watch and listen," Moloney said.

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