When the Trojan is executed, it copies the MBR to another location on the hard drive, then overwrites the original MBR with its own code.
The Trojan then creates the following files:
- C:\Program Files\MSDN\atixi.inf
- C:\Program Files\MSDN\atixx.sys
- C:\WINDOWS\inf\oem22.inf
- C:\WINDOWS\inf\oem22.PNF
- C:\WINDOWS\inf\oem23.inf
- C:\WINDOWS\inf\oem23.PNF
- C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\atixi.sys
- C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\atixx.sys
- C:\WINDOWS\LastGood\INF\oem22.inf
- C:\WINDOWS\LastGood\INF\oem22.PNF
- C:\WINDOWS\LastGood\INF\oem23.inf
- C:\WINDOWS\LastGood\INF\oem23.PNF
Note: Some of these files may be marked as hidden.
It also creates the following registry subkeys:
- HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\Control\Class\{02EB6841-28D2-44C2-8303-584F54E6D913}
- HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\Enum\Root\ATIXI\0000
- HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\LastKnownGoodRecovery\LastGood\INF
When the compromised computer is restarted, the malicious code will run first, executing the files it copied to the computer, then it will load the original MBR.
Symantec Security Response encourages all users and administrators to adhere to the following basic security "best practices":