This article provides a comprehensive analysis of two new variants of the KimJongRAT stealer.
Palo Alto Unit 42 combine new research findings with existing knowledge to provide a comprehensive resource for understanding and combating these new KimJongRAT variants. The KimJongRAT stealer was first described in 2013 by the Malware.lu CERT. Palo Alto researchers documented another variant of this family in 2019. One of the new variants uses a Portable Executable (PE) file and the other uses a PowerShell implementation. The PE and PowerShell variants are both initiated by clicking a Windows shortcut (LNK) file that downloads a dropper file from an attacker-controlled content delivery network (CDN) account.
Read more…
Source: Palo Alto Unit 42
Sign up for our Newsletter
The latest news and insights delivered right to your inbox.
Related:
- Cyber Group Disrupts Communication Networks of Iranian Oil Fleet
March 19, 2025
A hacker group has disrupted the communication networks of ships belonging to two major Iranian shipping companies sanctioned by the US. The group, called Lab Dookhtegan or “Read My Lips”, said it has disrupted the communication networks of 116 ships and therefore, severed the ships’ connections to each other, their ports, and external communication channels, according ...
- Arcane stealer: We want all your data
March 19, 2025
At the end of 2024, Kaspersky researchers discovered a new stealer distributed via YouTube videos promoting game cheats. What’s intriguing about this malware is how much it collects. It grabs account information from VPN and gaming clients, and all kinds of network utilities like ngrok, Playit, Cyberduck, FileZilla and DynDNS. The stealer was named Arcane, not ...
- Fake BianLian Ransomware Letters in Circulation
March 19, 2025
On March 5, the FBI issued an alert regarding a mail scam targeting U.S. business executives with extortion. The letters claim to be from noted ransomware group BianLian, demanding a payment in Bitcoin ranging from $250,000 to $500,000 within ten days of receipt. The FBI alert reads as follows: “Stamped “Time Sensitive Read Immediately”, the letter ...
- ZDI-CAN-25373: Windows shortcut exploit abused as Zero-Day in widespread APT campaigns
March 18, 2025
The Trend Zero Day Initiative threat hunting team identified significant instances of the exploitation of ZDI-CAN-25373 across a variety of campaigns dating back to 2017. The researchers analysis revealed that 11 state-sponsored groups from North Korea, Iran, Russia, and China have employed ZDI-CAN-25373 in operations primarily motivated by cyber espionage and data theft. Trend Micro discovered ...
- Critical Security Incident involving GitHub Action tj-action/changed-files
March 17, 2025
A critical security incident involving the tj-actions/changed-files GitHub Action has been reported. The changed-files action, which allows GitHub repositories to track file changes, has been tampered with to allow the exposure through GitHub Actions build logs of CI/CD secrets, including passwords, tokens, API keys, PII and other sensitive data that have been embedded within software code. ...
- Infamous ransomware hackers reveal new tool to brute-force VPNs
March 17, 2025
The “BRUTED” tool has apparently been in use for years now, according to cybersecurity researchers EclecticIQ, who have been sifting through the recently-leaked Black Basta chat logs, which were leaked and subsequently uploaded to a GPT for easier analysis. Besides being used to analyze the group’s structure, organization, and activities, researchers used it to identify the ...

