Malware


NEWS 
  • Mysterious ‘Robin Hood’ hackers donating stolen money

    October 19, 2020

    A hacking group is donating stolen money to charity in what is seen as a mysterious first for cyber-crime that’s puzzling experts. Darkside hackers claim to have extorted millions of dollars from companies, but say they now want to “make the world a better place”. In a post on the dark web, the gang posted receipts for ...

  • Operation Earth Kitsune, Tracking SLUB’s Current Operations

    October 19, 2020

    Trend Micro have already published findings on the SLUB malware’s past campaigns. In our latest research paper, we uncovered a recent watering hole campaign that involves a new variant of the malware. The threat, which we dubbed as such due to its abuse of Slack and GitHub in previous versions, has not abused either of ...

  • GravityRAT: The spy returns

    October 19, 2020

    In 2018, researchers at Cisco Talos published a post on the spyware GravityRAT, used to target the Indian armed forces. The Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-IN) first discovered the Trojan in 2017. Its creators are believed to be Pakistani hacker groups. According to our information, the campaign has been active since at least 2015, ...

  • Ryuk Ransomware Gang Uses Zerologon Bug for Lightning-Fast Attack

    October 19, 2020

    The Ryuk threat actors have struck again, moving from sending a phishing email to complete encryption across the victim’s network in just five hours. That breakneck speed is partially the result of the gang using the Zerologon privilege-escalation bug (CVE-2020-1472), less than two hours after the initial phish, researchers said. The Zerologon vulnerability allows an unauthenticated attacker ...

  • US charges Russian hackers behind NotPetya, KillDisk, OlympicDestroyer attacks

    October 19, 2020

    The US Department of Justice has unsealed charges today against six Russian nationals believed to be members of one of Russia’s elite hacking and cyberwar units — known as Sandworm. In court documents today, US officials said all six suspects are officers in Unit 74455 of the Russian Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU), a military intelligence agency ...

  • IAmTheKing and the SlothfulMedia malware family

    October 15, 2020

    On October 1, 2020, the DHS CISA agency released information about a malware family called SlothfulMedia, which they attribute to a sophisticated threat actor. We have been tracking this set of activity through our private reporting service, and we would like to provide the community with additional context. In June 2018, we published the first report ...

  • Two New IoT Vulnerabilities Identified with Mirai Payloads

    October 14, 2020

    Palo Alto Networks is proactively trying to safeguard its customers from attacks however possible. By leveraging its Next-Generation Firewall as sensors on the perimeter to detect malicious payloads and attack patterns, Unit 42 researchers are able to hunt down the menaces out there on the network, be they known or not. Unit 42 researchers have taken ...

  • Court orders seizure of ransomware botnet controls as U.S. election nears

    October 12, 2020

    Microsoft said Monday it had used a court order to take control of computers that were installing ransomware and other malicious software on local government networks and threatening to disrupt the November election. The maker of the Windows operating system said it seized a series of internet protocol addresses hosted by U.S. companies that had been ...

  • The most common malicious email attachments infecting Windows

    October 11, 2020

    To stay safe online, everyone needs to recognize malicious attachments that are commonly used in phishing emails to distribute malware. When distributing malware, threat actors create spam campaigns that pretend to be invoices, invites, payment information, shipping information, eFaxes, voicemails, and more. Included in these emails are malicious Word and Excel attachments, or links to them, ...

  • Fitbit Spyware Steals Personal Data via Watch Face

    October 9, 2020

    A wide-open app-building API would allow an attacker to build a malicious application that could access Fitbit user data, and send it to any server. Kev Breen, director of cyber threat research for Immersive Labs, created a proof-of-concept for just that scenario, after realizing that Fitbit devices are loaded with sensitive personal data. “Essentially, ...