Home / malware Trojan:SymbOS/Locknut.A
First posted on 12 July 2010.
Source: SecurityHomeAliases :
There are no other names known for Trojan:SymbOS/Locknut.A.
Explanation :
Also known as a trojan horse program, this is a deceptive program that performs additional actions without the user's knowledge or permission. It does not replicate.
Additional DetailsTrojan:SymbOS/Locknut.A is a malicous SIS file trojan that pretends to be patch for Symbian Series 60 mobile phones. It is distributed in files named patch_v1.sis and patch_v2.sis.
Locknut.A will only work on devices running Symbian OS 7.0S or newer; devices using Symbian OS 6.0 or 6.1 are unaffected.
Locknut is targeted against Symbian Series 60 devices, but also series 70 devices, such as Nokia 7710 are vulnerable to Locknut. However when trying to install Skulls trojan on Nokia 7710, user will get a warning that the SIS file is not intended for the device, so risk of accidental infection is low.
Installation
When Locknut.A sis file is installed the files will be installed into following locations:
€ c:\system\apps\gavno\gavno.app € c:\system\apps\gavno\gavno.rsc € c:\system\apps\gavno\gavno_caption.rsc
The Locknut.SIS will will also contain copy of itself that is copied into C:\ directory
When installed Locknut.A, drops binaries that will crash a critical System component, preventing application from being launched in the phone and effectively locking the phone.
There are also claims that Locknut would disable calling functionality, so that user couldn't make calls with infected phone. But we could not reproduce this effect with any phones we have.
Payload
Both versions of Locknut.A replace a critical system binary; the patch_v2.sis file will also drop Cabir.B, which will not be able to start on the phone.
Variant
There are also versions of Locknut that include Cabir.B in same SIS file (some AV vendors name this variant Gavno.B), but since the actual trojan functionality is totally identical to Locknut.A we call both samples Locknut.A
The Cabir.B included in the Locknut.A samples is harmless as the Locknut kills all applications on the infected phone, including Cabir.B that is installed from the same SIS file. Even if Locknut.B is disinfected the Cabir.B still won't start, as it is installed into wrong directory in the infected phone.
If user starts Cabir.B manually, after disinfecting the Locknut program, Cabir.B will spread independently according to its program - i.e., it will not transfer Locknut.A into other devices.
Note
This trojan was originally named Gavno, but since this word is also a rather vulgar term in Russian, the AV community has decided to rename it as Locknut.Last update 12 July 2010