

Italian Entities Targeted by China-Linked APT17’s 9002 RAT Malware – Active IOCs
July 17, 2024
GCleaner Malware – Active IOCs
July 18, 2024
Italian Entities Targeted by China-Linked APT17’s 9002 RAT Malware – Active IOCs
July 17, 2024
GCleaner Malware – Active IOCs
July 18, 2024Severity
Medium
Analysis Summary
NjRat is a Remote Access Trojan, which is found leveraging Pastebin to deliver a second-stage payload after initial infection. There are multiple versions of the secondary payload used, ranging from base64 encoded version, hexadecimal, JSON data format, compressed blobs, and plain text data with malicious URLs embedded within. This is done to evade detection by security products and increase the possibility of operating unnoticed. njRat is developed in the .NET framework and can hijack the functions of a compromised machine remotely, including taking screenshots, exfiltrating data, keylogging, and killing processes such as antivirus programs, while also connecting the machine to a botnet. RAT was also found abusing Windows API functions such as Windows API calls such as GetKeyboardState(), GetAsynckeyState(), and MapVirtualKey() for keylogging, and data theft. It was also discovered downloading web scraping tools such as “proxy scrapper” to extract large amounts of data via proxies.
Impact
- Unauthorized Access
Indicators of Compromise
MD5
- 1a3860fd6344044e6e7790774cbeaf8d
- 12b2b849d8192f9858bb6a780d53eb37
- eb9f70fc6af3d491265c095f75f566bd
- db359d36688c087074afe46cca60afd6
- 589cb02fa969e190a930d91dd9426012
- e2e17ea8d5d471e58cbef7258dfec0e3
- 893ae25692f0d06d32bf26203d7390a9
- 6e5f543ff7cee1770c6ce3f18d73c0b6
SHA-256
- 651efbaaddced564347355a681a0f1aefcf36f5b7327385cee13598e05b331ff
- 445c58c5c3422efe4af4f7963cf64f7e7476aea0b59fa3305b7dec51d613eb39
- 6941a089134fd4ab3a239a986c6292357fe70ac9f4e298333807ca59020df803
- 9f63f60ae709bc6c3f830c1656091583879cca7380ccbf99ec6b94465e4796aa
- 805d998ee44f7d72578307258e7c274e425b57a0a5edcfa01e3c846af1841564
- 1ef86b1cfa7e45f6602e24a18e76d5e556f781abb0acf18f92eaca95bb53e25d
- eb52dc8ab4ec5557c2353624b8ff2f01548662ec194432470c7148828d879bba
- 52d37473705d2bccb3f9b4bfd923c828eabcf75edb424977c5780de68021e964
SHA1
- de150e1973cace802849cdb182771de9dd0e9aaa
- 3727d88c7c8af8b20b06b6f22511cfc86275661e
- ccc4ad1e2cce9a39ceb106abe9f7e3fc4b5369d0
- 8ba854f942b1febc16a7e6bec3f2d06379649a8c
- b35bc9060be4b2c4a381b22b6942fe8c97ca131b
- 3cb8ddc90819a8d9b5d971a484b91c6593fb3df0
- f8a30540194ff76c0c5fe80ab08c18eb53a13dbb
- 7d4bc06e2b475a0f9b7cb7cd2d6da490c57775f9
Remediation
- Block all threat indicators at your respective controls.
- Search for indicators of compromise (IOCs) in your environment utilizing your respective security controls.
- Do not download documents attached in emails from unknown sources and strictly refrain from enabling macros when the source isn’t reliable.
- Enable antivirus and anti-malware software and update signature definitions promptly. Using multi-layered protection is necessary to secure vulnerable assets.
- Patch and upgrade any platforms and software timely and make it into a standard security policy.
- Enforce access management policies.
- 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.