New SLUB Backdoor Uses GitHub, Communicates via Slack


In mid-February, Kaspersky Lab received a request for incident response from one of its clients. The individual who initially reported the issue to our client refused to disclose the origin of the indicator that they shared. What we do know is that it was a screenshot from one of the client’s internal computers taken on February 11 while an employee was apparently browsing through his emails. In addition, the anonymous source added that the screenshot was transferred to a C2 using a stealer dubbed ‘Predator’.

As soon as the client contacted us, we started conducting a full investigation into the infected machine, including memory dumps, event logs, environment indicators from the network and so on and so forth. Finding very little information about this tool, we decided that seeing as how we’d already dived into the stealer, we might as well share some of our main findings in case other incidents occur in the future. The purpose of this blogpost is to enumerate the Predator stealer’s versions, technical features, indicators and Yara rule signatures, to help monitor and detect new samples, and to provide general information about its owners’ activities.

As well as all the information we collected from the client, we went the extra mile and contacted a source who had previously analyzed Predator. This source was @Fumik0_, a French malware researcher who analyzed versions 2.3.5 and 2.3.7 in his blog just a few months ago (October 2018).

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Source: Kaspersky Lab