Bitcoin Hit By Gameover Malware, Chinese Crackdown

China gets tough with exchanges trading Bitcoins, while new malware variant targets Bitcoin customers.

Mathew J. Schwartz, Contributor

December 18, 2013

4 Min Read

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Bitcoin aficionados were hit with a double whammy Wednesday, after China's largest Bitcoin exchange, BTC China Exchange, stopped accepting Chinese Yuan. The same day, security experts warned that a new variant of the Gameover malware, which is based on the Zeus banking Trojan, has begun targeting Bitcoin exchanges.

News of the blocking of Chinese Yuan (a.k.a. renminbi) deposits at Shanghai-based BTC China triggered a Bitcoin selloff, which caused the currency to lose about half of its value, dropping from a high of $1,250 Wednesday to a Bitcoin being offered for sale for just $636. At the Mt Gox exchange, meanwhile, the value of a Bitcoin Wednesday was averaging about $570.

The Chinese central bank's Bitcoin crackdown -- seen by some commentators as the government's attempt to bring the volatile virtual currency under control -- reportedly sparked a retaliatory series of distributed denial-of-service attacks that disrupted the website of the People's Bank of China.

[ Is mobile security improving? Read Android AV Improves But Still Can't Nuke Malware.]

The crackdown started last month, when the People's Bank of China prohibited the country's financial institutions from handling Bitcoins. On Monday, the central bank expanded that prohibition, telling all third-party payment providers that they must cease providing clearing services to all cryptographic virtual currencies -- including Bitcoin and Litecoin -- by the end of January.

"We essentially got notice from our third-party payment provider that they will discontinue accepting payments for us and new deposits," BTC China CEO Bobby Lee told the South China Morning Post. "We're still operating a bitcoin exchange in China, legally, and we're still allowing people to deposit and withdraw bitcoin and withdraw renminbi."

BTC China has been the world's largest Bitcoin exchange, handling 40% of the world's Bitcoin trading. But much of that trading has come from mainland China.

"A lot of people put Bitcoin's rise over recent months to China where interest in it has gone through the roof," Emily Spaven, editor of digital currency news site CoinDesk, told the BBC. "People are getting frightened that with the new regulations the country could now drop out of the ecosystem. Going forward, it's certainly not the end of Bitcoin, but people have been panic selling."

Beyond the wildly fluctuating value of Bitcoins, Bitcoin aficionados should also beware a new version of the Gameover banking malware, which has been updated to steal login credentials for Bitcoin exchanges. That warning was sounded by cybercrime expert Etay Maor, who works for IBM's Trusteeer. He said in an interview that the Bitcoin-targeting malware variant has been active since at least Nov. 29.

"This Gameover variant waits until an infected user attempts to log into the BTC China website," Maor said in a related blog post. "When this occurs, the malware steals the victim's username and password and suspends the session temporarily." That pause is so the malware can launch a social engineering attack against the user, by employing HTML injection to request that the user of the infected PC share the one-time password sent by BTC China to authorize the transaction.

"Once the cybercriminal has the victim's credentials he can easily perform an account takeover and assume control of the Bitcoins associated with the account," Maor said.

The Gameover variant is just the latest attack to be launched against Bitcoin users and exchanges. Many previous attacks have targeted -- and drained -- free e-wallet services that allow people to store their Bitcoins online. One of the virtues of attacking those sites is that if a hacker is successful, he can sell the stolen cryptographic currency anonymously.

"By definition, it won't be traceable," said Maor.

Mathew Schwartz is a freelance writer, editor, and photographer, as well the InformationWeek information security reporter.

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About the Author

Mathew J. Schwartz

Contributor

Mathew Schwartz served as the InformationWeek information security reporter from 2010 until mid-2014.

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