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Rewterz Threat Alert – STOP (DJVU) Ransomware – Active IOCs
March 5, 2023
Rewterz Threat Alert – SmokeLoader Malware – Active IOCs
March 5, 2023
Rewterz Threat Alert – STOP (DJVU) Ransomware – Active IOCs
March 5, 2023
Rewterz Threat Alert – SmokeLoader Malware – Active IOCs
March 5, 2023Severity
Medium
Analysis Summary
Cobalt Strike first appeared in 2012 in response to alleged flaws in the Metasploit Framework, an existing red team (penetration testing) tool. Cobalt Strike 3.0 was released in 2015 as a stand-alone opponent emulation platform. However, researchers began observing threat actors using Cobalt Strike by 2016. Cobalt Strike’s use in hostile activities was previously connected with huge cybercriminal operations like TA3546 and APT40. Two-thirds of detected Cobalt hit efforts from 2016 to 2018 were attributable to well-resourced cybercrime organizations or APT groups, according to researchers.
Cobalt Strike lets the attacker install a ‘Beacon’ agent on the target PC which provides the attacker with a plethora of capabilities, including command execution, file transfer, keylogging, mimikatz, port scanning, and privilege escalation. Cobalt Strike includes a toolkit called Artifact Kit that is used to create shellcode loaders.
Researchers discovered a new wave of phishing attacks in September that infect job seekers in the United States and New Zealand with Cobalt Strike beacons. The malware campaign used the lure of a job in order to infect victims with leaked versions of Cobalt Strike beacons.
Researchers discovered a new wave of phishing attacks in September that infect job seekers in the United States and New Zealand with Cobalt Strike beacons. The malware campaign used the lure of a job in order to infect victims with leaked versions of Cobalt Strike beacons. It was observed that Cobalt Strike is not the only piece of malware used in the attacks. In certain situations, individuals were instead infected with a different type of information-stealing malware known as RedLine or an Amadey botnet executor.
Impact
- Data Exfiltration
- Information Theft
Indicators of Compromise
MD5
- 2728e5e9dfb4afbdb1bb6e3356a5f12a
- 47ca254d94b8ba124ba8a3fdb4a52653
SHA-256
- 98c2fd1c9b0b0f55d9054394c0395405dd88d44f2509cede386789783e31492a
- 34da227493236d3129fabeebc637d0524123fb10b13a820d811041364fe0a59e
SHA-1
- d474cedbcf44a16e580abae86efbac10e748dc6f
- 910ffae9ce8b4f49f5527c9dab5fca9dddc8d60d
Remediation
- Block all threat indicators at your respective controls.
- Search for Indicator of compromise (IOCs) in your environment utilizing your respective security controls
- Emails from unknown senders should always be treated with caution.
- Never open links or attachments from unknown senders.
- Ensure that general security policies are employed including: implementing strong passwords, correct configurations, and proper administration security policies.
- Limit access to administrative accounts and portals to only relevant personnel and make sure they are not publicly accessible.
- Patch and upgrade any platforms and software timely and make it into a standard security policy. Prioritize patching known exploited vulnerabilities and zero-days.