CA Antivirus Flagged Windows Component as Virus      
Written by zhangyuan   
February 21, 2008 14:19

CA Inc. caused some headaches this week after its antivirus software inadvertently flagged part of the Windows OS as malware.

The SANS Internet Storm Center reported the problem on Friday saying that an overnight update to CA's eTrust Antivirus signatures had caused the software to flag a security-related process in Windows as malicious. The faulty update caused some Windows 2003 servers to crash and become unusable, SANS said.

The problem was that eTrust Antivirus was mistakenly flagging the Windows Lsass.exe process, said Bob Gordon, a CA spokesman. "CA quickly discovered and fixed an issue which temporarily caused some customers to detect a problem in their Lsass.exe files," he said in an e-mail.

Problem Fixed Quickly

According to Gordon, it took CA less than 7 hours to fix the mix-up. The problem was introduced in the 30.3.3054 update, released at 2:53 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST) and fixed in the 30.3.3056 update, which was issued at 9:34 a.m. EST. Go to CA's site for the latest updates.

The Lsass.exe process is part of Windows' security mechanism. So users who had set their eTrust Antivirus to automatically remove malicious software may have found that their systems crashed and were unable to boot up Windows once Lsass.exe was removed.

Antivirus software like CA's uses digital fingerprints, called signatures, to identify malicious software. In this case, eTrust Antivirus apparently mistook Lsass.exe for the Win32/Lassrv.B virus.

Goof Reflects Poorly on Antivirus Vendors

It is not unheard of for signature files to mistakenly identify legitimate software as malware, but it is remarkable that CA's software made the mistake with a well-known Windows component, according to Johannes Ullrich, chief research officer at SANS. CA should have been able to detect the problem in its quality-assurance testing, he said.

The mix-up apparently did not disrupt a large number of users, but it still reflects poorly on vendors like CA, Ullrich said. "It's another loss in trust toward the antivirus business," he said. "It tells you that the antivirus vendors don't do the testing."

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German : CA Antivirus gekennzeichnet Windows-Komponente als Virus
French : CA Antivirus Marqué comme composant de Windows virus
Japanese : CAのウイルス対策フラグWindowsコンポーネントウイルスとして