Digital DNA (DDNA) analyzes memory to identify potentially malicious behaviors exhibited by processes running on managed computers. It works from the cloud using an embedded agent on the devices you wish to monitor. We downloaded the responder installer -- DDNA uses this installer for Windows - and immediately hit a wall. The licensing options for this product are obscure. For example, we were told to click the Responder icon and follow the demo mode button to receive a license. There was no such button. It turns out that you need to work through the support desk and then everything works.
Documentation for DDNA also is a bit obscure. After pouring through the Responder docs, we finally found the section on DDNA, shown as a tab on the Responder desktop. We assume that this is because DDNA often is considered an OEM product and is integrated into Responder to perform its particular tasks.
All of that said, this really is a useful tool. It approaches threat analysis somewhat differently from other products and we certainly have no quarrel with that. The tool creates what CounterTack refers to as a Digital DNA Sequence. This is a hex sequence that is, presumably, unique to the target of analysis. The sequence - shown in the Sequence column - contains the trait sequence for the target. Taken together, the DDNA trait sequence is able to identify the presence of new or previously unknown malware. That, in our view, is the big benefit here.
Since DDNA works in memory, it is looking at an executed malware and very likely analyzing it - whether the malware uses a packer or crypter or not. It also leads to false positives on occasion. For example, the documentation warns of DRM causing false positives because it behaves the same as some types of malware.
The tool is capable of providing reports, specific traits, binaries, strings and symbols. In short, it behaves very much like a traditional reversing tool or debugger with the benefit that it picks out those things that are of particular interest to analysts.
For example, when examining traits, DDNA either provides its suspicions about a particular target or, when it knows for certain that it has found a problem, it displays that as what CounterTack calls a hard fact. Hard facts are those traits that are specifically known to be indicative of a likely infection. Other traits are displayed based on their potential severity. Each trait discovered is described. For example, a trait designated as severe (red) might point out a UPX packer - not a hard fact but pretty close and certainly worthy of concern.
Once you get this installed, it still is a bit quirky. That said, it has a lot of good information and is a solid memory analysis tool for threat analysis based on solid intelligence. We liked the analysis capabilities and the easy to understand analysis. However, for all of that, analysts with a technical background, particularly in forensics, will find this easiest to work with. Many of the displays will be quite familiar to digital forensic specialists, but most of these displays are at the drill-down level rather than at a top page. The top page view is quite clear, self-explanatory and indicative of what your next drill-down steps should be. In short, this is more of a technical analyst's tool than some tools that take an approach comfortable to lay analysts.