A startup funded by the U.S. government's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is ready to emerge from stealth mode with hardware and software-based technologies to fight the rapid spread of malicious rootkits. Komoku, of College Park, Md., plans to ship in the summer a beta of Gamma, a new rootkit detection tool that builds on a prototype used by several sensitive U.S. government departments to find operating system abnormalities that may be linked to malicious rootkit activity. Rootkits modify the flow of the kernel to hide the presence of an attack or compromise on a machine. This gives a hacker remote user access to a compromised system while avoiding detection by anti-virus scanners. . The company's Copilot prototype is a high-assurance PCI card capable of monitoring the host's memory and file system at the hardware level. It is specifically geared toward high-security servers and computers. Gamma, meanwhile, is a separate, software-only clone of Copilot that will target businesses interested in a low-assurance tool to protect laptops and PCs. The link for this article located at eWeek is no longer available. . Gamma rootkit detection software, backed by a government initiative, excels at finding and neutralizing evasive malware on PCs and laptops with ease and efficiency. Rootkit Detection, Malware Prevention, Security Technology, Copilot PCI Card, Government Research. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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