Quantcast
Channel: SANS Internet Storm Center, InfoCON: green
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 8246

Neutrino exploit kit sends Cerber ransomware, (Wed, May 4th)

$
0
0

Introduction

Seems like were always finding new ransomware. In early March 2016, BleepingComputer announced a new ransomware named Cerber had appeared near the end of February [1]. A few days later, Malwarebytes provided further analysis and more details on subsequent Cerber samples [2].

Ive seen Cerber distributed through exploit kits (EKs) and malicious spam (malspam). Im only aware of .rtf attachments that download and install Cerber when opened in Microsoft Word [3]." />
Shown above: Image of Cerber malspam from tier1net.com

By April 2016, Proofpoint reported Cerber was being distributed by Magnitude exploit kit (EK) using a Flash exploit based on CVE-2016-1019 (then a zero-day exploit) [4]. I ran across two Cerber malware samples sent by Neutrino EK near the end of April 2016, but I didnt realize it at the time [5]. Since then, other sources like broadanalysis.com have also reported Neutrino EK sending Cerber [6].

This diary examines a Cerber ransomware infection from Neutrino EK on Tuesday 2016-05-03." />
Shown above: Cerber fromNeutrino EK.

Details

The few compromised websites Ive seen associated with this particular Neutrino EK campaign have similar patterns of injected script as seen below." />
Shown above: Injected script in page from a compromised website leading to Neutrino EK.

Its a fairly straight-forward sequence of events. The compromised website leads to Neutrino EK. Then Neutrino EK sends Cerber ransomware. The only issue I had was generating an infection on a virtual machine (VM). On a VM, Cerber generated nearly the same network traffic, but it did not encrypt any files or generate any notices before deleting itself. On a normal host, Cerber acts as you might expect, encrypting files and showing notifications. Cerber also checks its IP and location at ipinfo.io on a normal host." />
Shown above:" />
Shown above: Traffic from a Cerber infection on a VM filtered in Wireshark.

In the above two images, Neutrino EK is on 185.58.227.227 over TCP port 80 using the following domains:

  • blmeujdhcb.eilong.top
  • mifblup.eilong.top
  • psjebmwpes.eaautomatic.top
  • wocvx.eaautomatic.top

With or without the IP check at ipinfo.io, Cerber sent UDP traffic with 9 bytes of data to 16,384 IP address from 85.93.0.0 to 85.93.63.255 (85.93.0.0/18 in CIDR notation). The infected host used the same source/destination ports, but content within those 9 bytes changed each time. Previous Cerber samples use different IP ranges and UDP ports. Not sure what this UDP traffic means, though. I havent found any more information about it, and I havent have time to dig into it further.

Images from the infected host" />
Shown above:">As others have already reported, Cerber speaks to you. It does this through a .vbs file named # DECRYPT MY FILES #.vbs. This .vbs file contains Visual Basic script that causes your Windows computer to speak, saying Attention! Attention! Attention! ten times followed by Your documents, photos, databases and other important files have been encrypted!" />
Shown above:" />
Shown above:" />
Shown above:" />
Shown above:" />
Shown above:">Final words

I havent seen as much Cerber as Ive seen other ransomware like CryptXXX from Angler EK or Locky from malspam. However, Cerber has been a fairly consistent threat since it first appeared. I expect well see more Cerber in the coming weeks.

Pcaps and malware for this ISC diary can be found here.

---
Brad Duncan
brad [at] malware-traffic-analysis.net

References:

[1] http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/the-cerber-ransomware-not-only-encrypts-your-data-but-also-speaks-to-you/
[2] https://blog.malwarebytes.org/threat-analysis/2016/03/cerber-ransomware-new-but-mature/
[3] https://www.tier1net.com/cerber-ransomware-campaign/
[4] https://www.proofpoint.com/us/threat-insight/post/killing-zero-day-in-the-egg
[5] http://www.malware-traffic-analysis.net/2016/04/29/index.html
[6] http://www.broadanalysis.com/2016/05/02/neutrino-ek-from-185-58-227-227-sends-cerber-ransomware/

(c) SANS Internet Storm Center. https://isc.sans.edu Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 8246

Trending Articles