-----Original Message-----malware
From: david@xxxxxxx [mailto:david@xxxxxxx]
On Fri, 15 Aug 2008, Press, Jonathan wrote:
-----Original Message-----
From: david@xxxxxxx [mailto:david@xxxxxxx]
The problem is that you have to account for the cases where theofmade it onto the system even if you were trying to catch it aheadfortime. For example:
- Administrator turns off or reduces AV protection for some reasonmatter.some period of time. It happens all the time.
according to the threat model actions of the administrator do notof
Sorry, I don't know what you mean.
the threat model that was posted two days ago in the initial messagethis thread specificly stated that actions of root are not somethingthatthis is trying to defend against.
I think you may have missed the point of any such statement.
Just to clarify...
The model does not exclude root-owned processes from the notification
and scanning sequence. If root attempts to execute a file, that file
would be scanned before the execution is allowed. If a root-owned
process attempts to open a file, that access would be blocked until the
file is scanned. If a root-owned process closes a file that has been
written to, that file would be scanned.
In addition, to generalize from the incorrect idea that the actions of
root are not being defended against to the idea that the possible
impacts of an administrator's actions in configuring an application
should not be accounted for at all in our thinking doesn't make sense to
me anyway.