Blue Pill (software)

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Blue Pill is the codename for a rootkit based on x86 virtualization. Blue Pill originally required AMD-V (Pacifica) virtualization support, but was later ported to support Intel VT-x (Vanderpool) as well. It was designed by Joanna Rutkowska and originally demonstrated at the Black Hat Briefings on August 3, 2006, with a reference implementation for the Microsoft Windows Vista kernel.

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[edit] Overview

The Blue Pill concept is to trap a running instance of the operating system by starting a thin hypervisor and virtualizing the rest of the machine under it. The previous operating system would still maintain its existing references to all devices and files, but nearly anything, including hardware interrupts, requests for data and even the system time could be intercepted (and a fake response sent) by the hypervisor.

Joanna Rutkowska claims that, since any detection program could be fooled by the hypervisor, such a system could be "100% undetectable". Since AMD virtualization is seamless by design, a virtualized guest is not supposed to be able to query whether it is a guest or not. Therefore, the only way Blue Pill could be detected is if the virtualization implementation were not functioning as specified.[1]

This assessment, repeated in numerous press articles, is disputed: AMD issued a statement dismissing the claim of full undetectability.[2] Some other security researchers and journalists also dismissed the concept as implausible.[3] Virtualization could be detected by a timing attack relying on external sources of time.[4]

In 2007, a group of researchers led by Thomas Ptacek of Matasano Security challenged Rutkowska to put Blue Pill against their rootkit detector software at that year's Black Hat conference,[5] but the deal was deemed a no-go following Rutkowska's request for $384,000 in funding as a prerequisite for entering the competition.[6] Rutkowska and Alexander Tereshkin countered detractors' claims during a subsequent Black Hat speech, arguing that the proposed detection methods were inaccurate.[7]

The source code for Blue Pill has since been made public,[8] under the following license: Any unauthorized use (including publishing and distribution) of this software requires a valid license from the copyright holder. This software has been provided for the educational use only during the Black Hat training and conference.[9]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ 'Blue Pill' Prototype Creates 100% Undetectable Malware, Ryan Naraine, eWeek.com
  2. ^ Faceoff: AMD vs. Joanna Rutkowska, eWeek.com
  3. ^ Debunking Blue Pill Myth, virtualization.info
  4. ^ [1]
  5. ^ Rutkowska faces ‘100% undetectable malware’ challenge, Ryan Naraine at zdnet.com
  6. ^ Blue Pill hacker challenge update: It’s a no-go, Ryan Naraine at zdnet.com
  7. ^ Showdown at the Blue Pill Corral
  8. ^ The Blue Pill Project[dead link]
  9. ^ http://web.archive.org/web/20080418123748/http://www.bluepillproject.org/

[edit] External links

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