Rewterz Threat Advisory – CVE-2022-30190: Follina Vulnerability (MSDT) – Active IOCs
July 27, 2022Rewterz Threat Alert – Eternity Malware – Active IOCs
July 27, 2022Rewterz Threat Advisory – CVE-2022-30190: Follina Vulnerability (MSDT) – Active IOCs
July 27, 2022Rewterz Threat Alert – Eternity Malware – Active IOCs
July 27, 2022Severity
Medium
Analysis Summary
The NanoCore remote access Trojan (RAT) was first discovered in 2013 when it was being sold in underground forums. The malware has a variety of functions such as a keylogger, a password stealer which can remotely pass along data to the malware operator. It also has the ability to tamper and view footage from webcams, screen locking, downloading and theft of files, and more.The current NanoCore RAT is now being spread through malspam campaign which utilizes social engineering in which the email contains a fake bank payment receipt and request for quotation. The emails also contain malicious attachments with .img or .iso extension. The .img and .iso files are used by disk image files to store raw dumps of either magnetic disk or optical disc. Another version of NanoCore is also distributed in phishing campaigns leveraging specially-crafted ZIP files which is designed to bypass secure email gateways. The malicious ZIP file can be extracted by certain versions of PowerArchiver, WinRar, and older 7-Zip. The stolen information is sent to the command and control (C&C) servers of the malware attacker.
Impact
- Credential Theft
- Unauthorized Access
- Theft of Sensitive Information
- File manipulation
- Remote command execution
- Keylogger
Indicators of Compromise
MD5
- d93e3f45ab9117965f198eaf9b2664ea
- 5869c4d55d9513c3fe18b5f4a28de990
- 50b50ac2a49ae89b21acd13f219a80bb
- 216da2f5569f547a153b2cc501980502
- f4afae9fcd187aab035053c38630ffcb
- 1acb9b6595cdb48535093287bd9403dd
- bb0c5b641434a05cea8ca07f625d9c5e
SHA-256
- 64fb8789e8e0fb9c082c2999538a5dec7de3d0f722db0e95024134cce9a6d3d0
- e50bad4ff6bfecab12f99bcbb4152b0fda73f59bbff3a856b65a1c42ac65975b
- 7cf6987c1d9a592a6093dbf2826a28a3f6c1f4ea552f53c58f111fd047ad3e26
- 442bad09c1091bfbe52a4b7c5b0a39b2691f0b56eedff731b8e90aa6f80cd388
- 66ff672b93bcc0ef9e19ba4a45b6f6c1943c21fe6256d2a0e448bd73049a7a6d
- fcdf39985da32de4575c36dff4d20b559f50d285227b8a5d7ba1a0d3604999b2
- 6976fc507b7c16f4bd34d26590f918b01a338754f23445b2f0876eb8e9a77580
SHA-1
- 1ef9d515fbf6eb63bf0ba2a96006cb575897cc03
- 843de0a250544eef459a164252a79415132afab4
- da1464fbb1e15a55fd1d26b6970ef44732f9ee8f
- 7ef12e1238bb11ee4337027fa86545420bb81614
- c68526bd091d50197b52d73e494de011eb0eb7f9
- 31f4bdbfbca43408efb3922ba711b876d0f4a274
- 1fa2320468e4131e5e50696637df42ab484a3e57
Remediation
- Block all threat indicators at your respective controls.
- Search for IOCs in your environment.