In September 2024, threat intelligence experts from the Positive Technologies Security Expert Center (PT ESC) discovered an email sent to a governmental organization belonging to a CIS country. Timestamps indicate that the email was sent back in June 2024. The email appeared to be a message without text, containing only an attached document.
However, the email client didn’t show the attachment. The body of the email contained distinctive tags with the statement eval(atob(…)), which decode and execute JavaScript code:
Read more…
Source: Positive Technologies
Related:
- The benefits of taking an intent-based approach to detecting Business Email Compromise
October 18, 2022
Business email compromise (BEC) is one of the most financially damaging online crimes. As per the internet crime 221 report, the total loss in 2021 due to BEC is around 2.4 billion dollars. Since 2013, BEC has resulted in a 43 billion dollars loss. The report defines BEC as a scam targeting businesses (not individuals) ...
- Linux dodges serious Wi-Fi security exploits
October 17, 2022
You may recall that Linus Torvalds recently added support for Rust in the Linux kernel. One of the big reasons for adding Rust was to put an end to Linux code memory problems. It can’t come soon enough. Recently, five serious Linux Wi-Fi security holes were uncovered. What did they all have in common? Go ahead, guess? ...
- Malware dev claims to sell new BlackLotus Windows UEFI bootkit
October 17, 2022
A threat actor is selling on hacking forums what they claim to be a new UEFI bootkit named BlackLotus, a malicious tool with capabilities usually linked to state-backed threat groups. UEFI bootkits are planted in the system firmware and are invisible to security software running within the operating system because the malware loads in the initial ...
- Phishing works so well crims won’t bother with deepfakes, says Sophos chap
October 17, 2022
Panic over the risk of deepfake scams is completely overblown, according to a senior security adviser for UK-based infosec company Sophos. “The thing with deepfakes is that we aren’t seeing a lot of it,” Sophos researcher John Shier told El Reg last week. Shier said current deepfakes – AI generated videos that mimic humans – aren’t the ...
- MyDeal data breach impacts 2.2M users, stolen data for sale online
October 17, 2022
Woolworths’ MyDeal subsidiary has disclosed a data breach affecting 2.2 million customers, with the hacker trying to sell the stolen data on a hacker forum. MyDeal is an Australian retail marketplace that connects online shoppers with local retailers. Retail giant Woolworths purchased 80% of the company in September but said their systems are on a completely different ...
- Venus Ransomware targets publicly exposed Remote Desktop services
October 16, 2022
Threat actors behind the relatively new Venus Ransomware are hacking into publicly-exposed Remote Desktop services to encrypt Windows devices. Venus Ransomware appears to have begun operating in the middle of August 2022 and has since encrypted victims worldwide. However, there was another ransomware using the same encrypted file extension since 2021, but it is unclear if ...

