Reeling in DarkGate Malware Attacks from the Beach


Last year, the number of malware attacks worldwide reached 6.08 billion. That’s a 10% increase compared with 2022. Why are cybercriminals developing so much malware? Because it is a vital tool to help them infiltrate businesses, networks or specific computers to steal or destroy sensitive data. or destroy sensitive data.

There are many types of malware infections. Here are just three examples – RYUK (ransomware), Astaroth (fileless malware), DarkGate (multifunctional malware). DarkGate is a notable example. It’s a sophisticated and adaptive piece of malware that’s designed to perform various malicious activities. This includes data theft, unauthorized access and system compromise.

Read more…
Source: Proofpoint


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • HTML attachments in phishing e-mails

    May 16, 2022

    The use of embedded HTML documents in phishing e-mails is a standard technique employed by cybercriminals. It does away with the need to put links in the e-mail body, which antispam engines and e-mail antiviruses usually detect with ease. HTML offers more possibilities than e-mail for camouflaging phishing content. There are two main types of HTML ...

  • FBI: Cyber Actors Scrape Credit Card Data from US Business’ Online Checkout Page and Maintain Persistence by Injecting Malicious PHP Code

    May 16, 2022

    As of January 2022, unidentified cyber actors unlawfully scraped credit card data from a US business by injecting malicious PHP Hypertext Preprocessor (PHP) code into the business’ online checkout page and sending the scraped data to an actor-controlled server that spoofed a legitimate card processing server. The unidentified cyber actors also established backdoor access to the ...

  • Ukraine supporters in Germany targeted with PowerShell RAT malware

    May 16, 2022

    An unknown threat actor is targeting German users interested in the Ukraine crisis, infecting them with a custom PowerShell RAT (remote access trojan) and stealing their data. The malware campaign uses a decoy site to lure users into fake news bulletins that supposedly contain unreleased information about the situation in Ukraine. These sites offer malicious documents that ...

  • Iran-linked Cobalt Mirage extracts money, info from US orgs – report

    May 13, 2022

    The Iran-linked Cobalt Mirage crew is running attacks against America for both financial gain and for cyber-espionage purposes, according to Secureworks’ threat intelligence team. The cybercriminal gang has been around since June 2020, and its most recent activities have been put into two categories. One, using ransomware to extort money, as illustrated by a strike in ...

  • Ukrainian crook jailed in US for selling thousands of stolen login credentials

    May 13, 2022

    A Ukrainian man has been sentenced to four years in a US federal prison for selling on a dark-web marketplace stolen login credentials for more than 6,700 compromised servers. Glib Oleksandr Ivanov-Tolpintsev, 28, was arrested by Polish authorities in Korczowa, Poland, on October 3, 2020, and extradited to America. He pleaded guilty on February 22, and ...

  • BPFdoor: Stealthy Linux malware bypasses firewalls for remote access

    May 12, 2022

    A recently discovered backdoor malware called BPFdoor has been stealthily targeting Linux and Solaris systems without being noticed for more than five years. BPFdoor is a Linux/Unix backdoor that allows threat actors to remotely connect to a Linux shell to gain complete access to a compromised device. The malware does not need to open ports, it can’t ...