For good measure he provided a "black list" of servers controlled by the Kelihos gang, which essentially blocks those computers from ever visiting those sites.
As infected machines visited his command and control server, red dots showed up on a map on a video screen at the front of a conference room at the RSA security conference in San Francisco, winning Werner a round of applause for a rare victory in the fight against cyber crime.
A few hours later, he said that tens of thousands of infected machines had checked into the server of CrowdStrike, which this week unveiled products to help businesses fight sophisticated cyber attacks.
Werner has been using his keyboard to fight cyber crime for nearly 10 years.
"It's a passion," he said. "I'm interested in botnets that are technically challenging."
That passion has kept him persevering in his battle with botnet "herders," or the criminals who control infected machines, despite constant setbacks.
He previously worked with parties including Microsoft Corp and Kaspersky Lab on other efforts to shut down Kelihos and a related botnet known as Waledac, only to see them quickly re-emerge.
"It's an industry," he said. "There is some gang pulling the strings."
(Editing by Jeremy Laurence)
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