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A Startup is Selling Data Hacked from Peoples’ Computers to Debt Collectors
A Startup is Selling Data Hacked from Peoples’ Computers to Debt Collectors
404media.co - Infostealer data can include passwords, email and billing addresses, and the embarrassing websites you use. Farnsworth Intelligence is selling to divorce lawyers and other industries. When your laptop is infected with infostealing malware, it’s not just hackers that might get your passwords, billing and email addresses, and a list of sites or services you’ve created accounts on, potentially including some embarrassing ones. A private intelligence company run by a young founder is now taking that hacked data from what it says are more than 50 million computers, and reselling it for profit to a wide range of different industries, including debt collectors; couples in divorce proceedings; and even companies looking to poach their rivals’ customers. Essentially, the company is presenting itself as a legitimate, legal business, but is selling the same sort of data that was previously typically sold by anonymous criminals on shady forums or underground channels. Multiple experts 404 Media spoke to called the practice deeply unethical, and in some cases the use of that data probably illegal. The company is also selling access to a subset of the data to anyone for as little as $50, and 404 Media used it to uncover unsuspecting victims’ addresses. The activities of the company, called Farnsworth Intelligence, show a dramatic shift in the bevvy of companies that collect and sell access to so-called open source intelligence, or OSINT. Historically, OSINT has included things like public social media profiles or flight data. Now, companies increasingly see data extracted from peoples’ personal or corporate machines and then posted online as fair game not just to use in their own investigations, but to repackage and sell too. “To put it plainly this company is profiting off of selling stolen data, re-victimizing people who have already had their personal devices compromised and their data stolen,” Cooper Quintin, senior public interest technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), told 404 Media. “This data will likely be used to further harm people by police using it for surveillance without a warrant, stalkers using it to gather information on their targets, high level scams, and other damaging motives.” Infostealers are pieces of malware, often stealthily bundled in a piece of pirated software, that steal a victim’s cookies, login credentials, and often more information stored in their browser too. On its website, Farnsworth lays out several potential uses for that stolen data. This includes “skip tacing,” presumably a typo of skip tracing, which is where a private individual or company tracks someone down who owes a debt. The website says users can “find debtors up-to-date addresses.” Another use case is to “Find high impact evidence that can make/break the case of million dollar lawsuits, high value divorce cases, etc.” A third is to “generate lead lists of customers/users from competitors [sic] companies,” because the data could show which competing products they have login credentials for, and, presumably, use.
·404media.co·
A Startup is Selling Data Hacked from Peoples’ Computers to Debt Collectors
TikTok Videos Promise Pirated Apps, Deliver Vidar and StealC Infostealers Instead
TikTok Videos Promise Pirated Apps, Deliver Vidar and StealC Infostealers Instead
Trend™ Research uncovered a campaign on TikTok that uses videos to lure victims into downloading information stealers, a tactic that can be automated using AI tools. Trend Research uncovered a new social engineering campaign using TikTok to deliver the Vidar and StealC information stealers. This attack uses videos (possibly AI-generated) to instruct users to execute PowerShell commands, which are disguised as software activation steps. TikTok’s algorithmic reach increases the likelihood of widespread exposure, with one video reaching more than half a million views. Businesses can be affected by data exfiltration, credential theft, and potential compromise of sensitive systems as a result of this threat. Reinforcing security awareness, especially against AI-generated content, is crucial. Monitoring for unusual command execution involving PowerShell or other system utilities also helps identify malicious activity early. Trend Vision One™ detects and blocks the IOCs discussed in this blog. rend Vision One customers can also access hunting queries, threat insights, and threat intelligence reports to gain rich context and the latest updates on this campaign Trend Research has uncovered a novel social engineering campaign using TikTok’s vast user base to distribute information-stealing malware, specifically Vidar and StealC. Unlike the prevalent Fake CAPTCHA campaign — which relies on fake CAPTCHA pages and clipboard hijacking to trick users into running malicious scripts — this new campaign pivots to exploiting the popularity and viral nature of TikTok. Threat actors are now using TikTok videos that are potentially generated using AI-powered tools to socially engineer users into executing PowerShell commands under the guise of guiding them to activate legitimate software or unlock premium features. This campaign highlights how attackers are ready to weaponize whichever social media platforms are currently popular to distribute malware. This report details the observed tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs), indicators of compromise (IoCs), and the potential impact of this trend.
·trendmicro.com·
TikTok Videos Promise Pirated Apps, Deliver Vidar and StealC Infostealers Instead