

Rewterz Threat Advisory – CVE-2023-6129 – OpenSSL Vulnerability
January 15, 2024
Rewterz Threat Advisory – ICS: Schneider Electric Easergy Studio Vulnerability
January 15, 2024
Rewterz Threat Advisory – CVE-2023-6129 – OpenSSL Vulnerability
January 15, 2024
Rewterz Threat Advisory – ICS: Schneider Electric Easergy Studio Vulnerability
January 15, 2024Severity
High
Analysis Summary
GandCrab – a ransomware-as-a-service variant – was discovered in early 2018. At least five versions of GandCrab have been created since its discovery. GandCrab ransomware encrypts victims’ files and demands ransom money in exchange for decryption keys. GandCrab targets organizations and individuals that use Microsoft Windows-powered PCs. This ransomware has attacked a huge number of systems in India, Chile, Peru, the United States, and the Philippines. This ransomware has been linked to some of the most notorious ransomware outbreaks, resulting in enormous financial losses for victims. To effectively victimize the target, its operators frequently try to imitate reputable services. In January 2020, for example, GandCrab was transmitted in a Word document labeled “Flu pandemic warning.doc” that purportedly came from the Centers for Disease Control. The virus is assigned various names by different antivirus software including Trojan.Ransom.GandCrab, Win32/Filecoder.GandCrab, Ransom: Win32/GandCrab, and others

Impact
- File Encryption
- Financial Loss
Indicators of Compromise
MD5
- 503648c5e5ec6444125f5b8cfe5d520e
- 2c0e47233b4fe591cd7f40d8cf4dc497
- 60b7a880df0285381487cd741ee18fa9
- c99f28844430e3b22458bb4a2d490748
- 2c590ad5c022d18658d64581d4eb22fd
SHA-256
- ced2d4066c41d15d582fbe64c417d0d38c3696f0979b3fc4a4cc1db8a0332b07
- fb10e795c0524ae59fe3f3c7e234c0f2a3650ea9a92e8774dc8225ede9e0bf70
- 2e1646e5bcff7912bdb34118fdd625c6b858b0a13c8ad01e38e457cb3673176e
- f0aaba0b2b0103de760ac304e936b4a1cb0ce006e417628253f29b4f220328d2
- ec6a7a8737c807b3c74990ca2d8b57774841211d58d36182ed2a718f4e051dc3
SHA-1
- 7d3f07993acdf56b65e6875f41396eb5e4d35b1e
- 26a2cd4d51dd5a7b4467cf9960d536bf4db2a64e
- 23ec8758fc06a46d258aab54e6fd264031e537f4
- 70eac750e3e5332f5902c8e12bf88d11212d6da5
- d9806aab2686ab2b4807517d490412be3aa4e413
Remediation
- Block all threat indicators at your respective controls.
- Search for Indicators of compromise (IOCs) in your environment utilizing your respective security controls.
- Maintain cyber hygiene by updating your anti-virus software and implementing a patch management lifecycle.
- Maintain Offline Backups – In a ransomware attack, the adversary will often delete or encrypt backups if they have access to them. That’s why it’s important to keep offline (preferably off-site), encrypted backups of data and test them regularly.
- Emails from unknown senders should always be treated with caution.
- Never trust or open ” links and attachments received from unknown sources/senders.
- Patch and upgrade any platforms and software timely and make it into a standard security policy. Prioritize patching known exploited vulnerabilities and zero-days.
- Along with network and system hardening, code hardening should be implemented within the organization so that their websites and software are secure. Use testing tools to detect any vulnerabilities in the deployed codes.
- Enable antivirus and anti-malware software and update signature definitions on time. Using multi-layered protection is necessary to secure vulnerable assets.