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L’art de l’évasion How Shlayer hides its configuration inside Apple proprietary DMG files
L’art de l’évasion How Shlayer hides its configuration inside Apple proprietary DMG files
While conducting routine threat hunting for macOS malware on Ad networks, I stumbled upon an unusual Shlayer sample. Upon further analysis, it became clear that this variant was different from the known Shlayer variants such as OSX/Shlayer.D, OSX/Shlayer.E, or ZShlayer. We have dubbed it OSX/Shlayer.F.
·objective-see.org·
L’art de l’évasion How Shlayer hides its configuration inside Apple proprietary DMG files
Threat Spotlight: XLLing in Excel - threat actors using malicious add-ins
Threat Spotlight: XLLing in Excel - threat actors using malicious add-ins
As more and more users adopt new versions of Microsoft Office, it is likely that threat actors will turn away from VBA-based malicious documents to other formats such as XLLs or rely on exploiting newly discovered vulnerabilities to launch malicious code.
·blog.talosintelligence.com·
Threat Spotlight: XLLing in Excel - threat actors using malicious add-ins
Raspberry Robin Malware Targets Telecom, Governments
Raspberry Robin Malware Targets Telecom, Governments
We found samples of the Raspberry Robin malware spreading in telecommunications and government office systems beginning September. The main payload itself is packed with more than 10 layers for obfuscation and is capable of delivering a fake payload once it detects sandboxing and security analytics tools.
·trendmicro.com·
Raspberry Robin Malware Targets Telecom, Governments
An infostealer comes to town: Dissecting a highly evasive malware targeting Italy
An infostealer comes to town: Dissecting a highly evasive malware targeting Italy
Cluster25 researchers analyzed several campaigns (also publicly reported by CERT-AGID) that used phishing emails to spread an InfoStealer malware written in .NET through an infection chain that involves Windows Shortcut (LNK) files and Batch Scripts (BAT). Taking into account the used TTPs and extracted evidence, the attacks seem perpetrated by the same adversary (internally named AUI001).
·blog.cluster25.duskrise.com·
An infostealer comes to town: Dissecting a highly evasive malware targeting Italy
CVE-2022-41040 and CVE-2022-41082 – zero-days in MS Exchange
CVE-2022-41040 and CVE-2022-41082 – zero-days in MS Exchange
At the end of September, GTSC reported the finding of two 0-day vulnerabilities in Microsoft Exchange Server, CVE-2022-41040 and CVE-2022-41082. The cybersecurity community dubbed the pair of vulnerabilities ProxyNotShell.
·securelist.com·
CVE-2022-41040 and CVE-2022-41082 – zero-days in MS Exchange
Mallox Ransomware showing signs of Increased Activity
Mallox Ransomware showing signs of Increased Activity
“TargetCompany” is a type of ransomware that was first identified in June 2021. The researchers named it TargetCompany ransomware because it adds the targeted company name as a file extension to the encrypted files. In September 2022, researchers identified a TargetCompany ransomware variant targeting Microsoft SQL servers and adding the “Fargo” extension to the encrypted files. TargetCompany ransomware is also known to add a “Mallox” extension after encrypting the files.
·blog.cyble.com·
Mallox Ransomware showing signs of Increased Activity
Pulling the Curtains on Azov Ransomware: Not a Skidsware but Polymorphic Wiper - Check Point Research
Pulling the Curtains on Azov Ransomware: Not a Skidsware but Polymorphic Wiper - Check Point Research
* Check Point Research (CPR) provides under-the-hood details of its analysis of the infamous Azov Ransomware * Investigation shows that Azov is capable of modifying certain 64-bit executables to execute its own code * Azov is designed to inflict impeccable damage to the infected machine it runs on * CPR sees over 17K of Azov-related samples submitted to VirusTotal
·research.checkpoint.com·
Pulling the Curtains on Azov Ransomware: Not a Skidsware but Polymorphic Wiper - Check Point Research
Hitching a ride with Mustang Panda
Hitching a ride with Mustang Panda
Avast discovered a distribution point where a malware toolset is hosted, but also serves as temporary storage for the gigabytes of data being exfiltrated on a daily basis, including documents, recordings, and webmail dumps including scans of passports from Asian, American and European citizens and diplomats applying for Burmese visas, from Burmese human rights activists and Burmese government institutions.
·decoded.avast.io·
Hitching a ride with Mustang Panda
New MuddyWater Threat: Old Kitten; New Tricks
New MuddyWater Threat: Old Kitten; New Tricks
MuddyWater, also known as Static Kitten and Mercury, is a cyber espionage group that’s most likely a subordinate element within Iran's Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS). Since at least 2017 MuddyWater has targeted a range of government and private organizations across sectors, including telecommunications, local government, defense, and oil and natural gas organizations, in the Middle East, Asia, Africa, Europe, and North America.
·deepinstinct.com·
New MuddyWater Threat: Old Kitten; New Tricks
Blowing Cobalt Strike Out of the Water With Memory Analysis
Blowing Cobalt Strike Out of the Water With Memory Analysis
Unit 42 researchers examine several malware samples that incorporate Cobalt Strike components, and discuss some of the ways that we catch these samples by analyzing artifacts from the deltas in process memory at key points of execution. We will also discuss the evasion tactics used by these threats, and other issues that make their analysis problematic.
·unit42.paloaltonetworks.com·
Blowing Cobalt Strike Out of the Water With Memory Analysis
Preparing for a Russian cyber offensive against Ukraine this winter
Preparing for a Russian cyber offensive against Ukraine this winter
As we report more fully below, in the wake of Russian battlefield losses to Ukraine this fall, Moscow has intensified its multi-pronged hybrid technology approach to pressure the sources of Kyiv’s military and political support, domestic and foreign. This approach has included destructive missile and cyber strikes on civilian infrastructure in Ukraine, cyberattacks on Ukrainian and now foreign-based supply chains, and cyber-enabled influence operations[1]—intended to undermine US, EU, and NATO political support for Ukraine, and to shake the confidence and determination of Ukrainian citizens.
·blogs.microsoft.com·
Preparing for a Russian cyber offensive against Ukraine this winter
New RapperBot Campaign – We Know What You Bruting for this Time | FortiGuard Labs
New RapperBot Campaign – We Know What You Bruting for this Time | FortiGuard Labs
FortiGuard Labs provides an analysis on RapperBot focusing on comparing samples for different campaigns, including one aiming to launch Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks. Read our blog to learn more about the differences observed in this campaign vs previous RapperBot and similar campaigns in the past.
·fortinet.com·
New RapperBot Campaign – We Know What You Bruting for this Time | FortiGuard Labs
BumbleBee Zeros in on Meterpreter
BumbleBee Zeros in on Meterpreter
In this intrusion from May 2022, the threat actors used BumbleBee as the initial access vector from a Contact Forms campaign. We have previously reported on two BumbleBee intrusions (1, 2), and this report is a continuation of a series of reports uncovering multiple TTPs seen by BumbleBee post exploitation operators. The intrusion began with the delivery of an ISO file that contained an LNK and a DLL. The threat actors leveraged BumbleBee to load a Meterpreter agent and Cobalt Strike Beacons. They then performed reconnaissance, used two different UAC bypass techniques, dumped credentials, escalated privileges using a ZeroLogon exploit, and moved laterally through the environment.
·thedfirreport.com·
BumbleBee Zeros in on Meterpreter
The Case of Cloud9 Chrome Botnet
The Case of Cloud9 Chrome Botnet
The Zimperium zLabs team recently discovered a malicious browser extension, originally called Cloud9, which not only steals the information available during the browser session but can also install malware on a user's device and subsequently assume control of the entire device. In this blog, we will take a deeper look into this malicious browser extension.
·zimperium.com·
The Case of Cloud9 Chrome Botnet
Analysis of a Remote Code Execution (RCE) Vulnerability in Cobalt Strike 4.7.1
Analysis of a Remote Code Execution (RCE) Vulnerability in Cobalt Strike 4.7.1
Command & Control (C2) frameworks are a very sensitive component of Red Team operations. Often, a Red Team will be in a highly privileged position on a target’s network, and a compromise of the C2 framework could lead to a compromise of both the red team operator’s system and control over beacons established on a target’s systems. As such, vulnerabilities in C2 frameworks are high priority targets for threat actors and Counterintelligence (CI) operations. On September 20, 2022, HelpSystems published an out-of-band patch for Cobalt Strike which stated that there was potential for Remote Code Execution (RCE).
·securityintelligence.com·
Analysis of a Remote Code Execution (RCE) Vulnerability in Cobalt Strike 4.7.1
Archive Sidestepping: Emotet Botnet Pushing Self-Unlocking Password-Protected RAR
Archive Sidestepping: Emotet Botnet Pushing Self-Unlocking Password-Protected RAR
Trustwave SpiderLabs’ spam traps have identified an increase in threats packaged in password-protected archives with about 96% of these being spammed by the Emotet Botnet. In the first half of 2022, we identified password-protected ZIP files as the third most popular archive format used by cybercriminals to conceal malware.
·trustwave.com·
Archive Sidestepping: Emotet Botnet Pushing Self-Unlocking Password-Protected RAR