cyberveille.decio.ch

cyberveille.decio.ch

#Analysis
ASyncRat surpasses Dridex, TrickBot and Emotet to become dominant email threat
ASyncRat surpasses Dridex, TrickBot and Emotet to become dominant email threat
Earlier this year Malwarebytes released its 2022 Threat Review, a review of the most important threats and cybersecurity trends of 2021, and what they could mean for 2022. Among other things it covers the year’s alarming rebound in malware detections, and a significant shift in the balance of email threats.
·blog.malwarebytes.com·
ASyncRat surpasses Dridex, TrickBot and Emotet to become dominant email threat
Analyzing a Pirrit adware installer
Analyzing a Pirrit adware installer
While Windows holds the largest market share on malware, macOS has its fair share of threats that mostly exist in an adware/grayware area. In this post I want to walk through how a Pirrit PKG file installer works. There are lots of more complex threats, but this is a good place to start if you’re just jumping into analysis. If you want to follow along at home, I’m working with this file in MalwareBazaar: https://bazaar.abuse.ch/sample/d39426dbceb54bba51587242f8101184df43cc23af7dc7b364ca2327e28e7825/.
·forensicitguy.github.io·
Analyzing a Pirrit adware installer
Google Online Security Blog: The Package Analysis Project: Scalable detection of malicious open source packages
Google Online Security Blog: The Package Analysis Project: Scalable detection of malicious open source packages
Despite open source software’s essential role in all software built today, it’s far too easy for bad actors to circulate malicious packages that attack the systems and users running that software. Unlike mobile app stores that can scan for and reject malicious contributions, package repositories have limited resources to review the thousands of daily updates and must maintain an open model where anyone can freely contribute. As a result, malicious packages like ua-parser-js, and node-ipc are regularly uploaded to popular repositories despite their best efforts, with sometimes devastating consequences for users.
·security.googleblog.com·
Google Online Security Blog: The Package Analysis Project: Scalable detection of malicious open source packages
Introducing Package Analysis: Scanning open source packages for malicious behavior
Introducing Package Analysis: Scanning open source packages for malicious behavior
Today we’re pleased to announce the initial prototype version of the Package Analysis project, an OpenSSF project addressing the challenge of identifying malicious packages in popular open source repositories. In just one month of analysis, the project identified more than 200 malicious packages uploaded to PyPI and npm.
·openssf.org·
Introducing Package Analysis: Scanning open source packages for malicious behavior
Lapsus$: when kiddies play in the big league
Lapsus$: when kiddies play in the big league
You may not have missed all the noises recently caused by Lapsus$, a group that seems to specialize in extortion without necessarily leveraging ransomware. At first glance, Lapsus$ check marks all elements that would make researchers put them in the low priority threats, especially considering their readiness to make dramas and OpSec failures. Except that the group has successfully managed to significantly enrich its victim list with high profile corporations, thus drawing all our attention. In the following, we will describe the threat actor profile that was drawn by our investigations based either on OSINT, dark web or infrastructure analysis.
·sekoia.io·
Lapsus$: when kiddies play in the big league
BRANCH HISTORY INJECTION
BRANCH HISTORY INJECTION
On the Effectiveness of Hardware Mitigations Against Cross-Privilege Spectre-v2 Attacks BHI (or Spectre-BHB) is a revival of cross-privilege Spectre-v2 attacks on modern systems deploying in-hardware defenses. And we have a very neat end-to-end exploit leaking arbitrary kernel memory on modern Intel CPUs to prove it (PoC||GTFO right?).
·vusec.net·
BRANCH HISTORY INJECTION
An update on the threat landscape
An update on the threat landscape
Online security is extremely important for people in Ukraine and the surrounding region right now. Government agencies, independent newspapers and public service providers need it to function and individuals need to communicate safely. Google’s Threat Analysis Group (TAG) has been working around the clock, focusing on the safety and security of our users and the platforms that help them access and share important information.
·blog.google·
An update on the threat landscape
Cyber-attack on ICRC: What we know
Cyber-attack on ICRC: What we know
Nearly a month has passed since we determined that servers hosting personal data belonging to more than 515,000 people worldwide were hacked in a sophisticated cyber-attack. We are now in a position to share some findings of our analysis of this data breach.
·icrc.org·
Cyber-attack on ICRC: What we know
SysJoker analyzing the first (macOS) malware of 2022!
SysJoker analyzing the first (macOS) malware of 2022!
Earlier today (January 11th), Researchers at Intezer published an report titled, “New SysJoker Backdoor Targets Windows, Linux, and macOS.” In this report, they detailed a new cross-platform backdoor they named SysJoker. Though initially discovered on Linux, the Intezer researchers shortly thereafter also found both Windows and Mac versions: *"SysJoker was first discovered during an active attack on a Linux-based web server of a leading educational institution. After further investigation, we found that SysJoker also has Mach-O and Windows PE versions." -Intezer*
·objective-see.com·
SysJoker analyzing the first (macOS) malware of 2022!