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  • Emotet malware infects users again after fixing broken installer


    Karlston

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    • 529 views
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    The Emotet malware phishing campaign is up and running again after the threat actors fixed a bug preventing people from becoming infected when they opened malicious email attachments.

     

    Emotet is a malware infection distributed through spam campaigns with malicious attachments. If a user opens the attachment, malicious macros or scripts will download the Emotet DLL and load it into memory.

     

    Once loaded, the malware will search for and steal emails to use in future spam campaigns and drop additional payloads such as Cobalt Strike or other malware that commonly leads to ransomware attacks.

    Buggy attachments broke the Emotet campaign

    Last Friday, the Emotet malware distributors launched a new email campaign that included password-protected ZIP file attachments containing Windows LNK (shortcut) files pretending to be Word documents.

     

    emotet-phishing-email.jpg

    Current Emotet phishing email exampleSource: Cofense

     

    When a user double-clicked on the shortcut, it would execute a command that searches the shortcut file for a particular string that contains Visual Basic Script code, appends the found code to a new VBS file, and executes that VBS file, as shown below.

     

    emotet-command.jpg

    Emotet shortcut commands from Friday's campaignSource: BleepingComputer

     

    However, this command contained a bug as it used a static shortcut name of 'Password2.doc.lnk,' even though the actual name of the attached shortcut file is different, like 'INVOICE 2022-04-22_1033, USA.doc'.

     

    This caused the command to fail, as the Password2.doc.lnk file did not exist, and thus the VBS file was not created, as explained by the Emotet research group Cryptolaemus.

     

     

    Cryptolaemus researcher Joseph Roosen told BleepingComptuer that Emotet shut down the new email campaign at approximately 00:00 UTC on Friday after discovering that the bug was preventing users from becoming infected.

     

    Unfortunately, Emotet fixed the bug today and, once again, started spamming users with malicious emails containing password-protected zip files and shortcut attachments.

     

    These shortcuts now reference the correct filenames when the command is executed, allowing the VBS files to be created correctly and the Emotet malware to be downloaded and installed on victims' devices.

     

    emotet-command-fixed.jpg

    Fixed Emotet attachment commandSource: BleepingComputer

     

    Email security firm Cofense told BleepingComputer that the used attachment named used in today's Emotet campaigns are:

    form.zip
    Form.zip
    Electronic form.zip
    PO 04252022.zip
    Form - Apr 25, 2022.zip
    Payment Status.zip
    BANK TRANSFER COPY.zip
    Transaction.zip
    ACH form.zip
    ACH payment info.zip

    If you receive an email with similar password-protected attachments, it is strongly advised that you do not open them.

     

    Instead, you should contact your network or security admins and let them examine the attachment to determine if they are malicious or not.

     

     

    Emotet malware infects users again after fixing broken installer


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