Rewterz Threat Alert – Nanocore Rat – Active IOCs
June 3, 2021Rewterz Threat Alert – Dridex Banking Trojan – Active IOCs
June 3, 2021Rewterz Threat Alert – Nanocore Rat – Active IOCs
June 3, 2021Rewterz Threat Alert – Dridex Banking Trojan – Active IOCs
June 3, 2021Severity
High
Analysis Summary
Also known as “Racealer,” Racoon is used to steal sensitive and confidential information including login credentials, credit card information, cryptocurrency wallets and browser information (cookies, history, autofill) from almost 60 applications. Raccoon stealer is written in C++ and it has a wide range of methods and features for stealing data from popular browsers, email clients and cryptocurrency wallets. The malware is delivered via exploit kits that use browser-based vulnerabilities to redirect victims to landing pages injected with exploit codes. It’s also spread via phishing campaigns convincing targets to execute the malicious payload or macros.
The malware gathers information about the machine like the OS arch and version, system language, hardware information, and installed applications. In addition, it can take screenshots from the user’s machine if that was enabled by the attacker’s configuration. After fulfilling all its stealing capabilities, Raccoon gathers all the files that it wrote to the temp folder into one zip file named Log.zip. Now, all it has to do is send the zip file back to the C&C server and delete all traces of itself.
Impact
- Data exfiltration
- Credential theft
- Theft of financial information
- Financial loss
Indicators of Compromise
MD5
- c2ac724339045f253306ae9ab38cbf4f
- eae59708bca0453042245ab2f448c04b
- bee124850f83653963bed43ce66d7024
- ee8186ae8d2615ee4a859007556227ec
- 7a8bf878d6438e28822cb499cb7da107
SHA-256
- d626090ca79fc0a3494f3f89148180beb850299ce7cae9f115753d5c04afbc6a
- d92b5ee6098cb15f04d53981d04e6b627ddb75e7edc5bd74ddfecf605e99cfa2
- 99012d5b9570085ee92b1fc99833ab06ce369f8e6bf76bdc713c5d3f5ea47628
- 5d10c7f9f39632b3886eea2d54acc35b0f64494a6987fdd1503375760335f07f
- 7de1cb68c44e2762ecb7756d5b0f7de4c70f92ffb93adfc2d2c9f5c192eda5fd
- e742a96dc71ec754113402ceb94967fb5c2081f12a08c9b895056f8feb549f0a
- 96de9d90945d198cd5aed4a446e464ba13e2e4e92d3649a396825864a0fcd17f
- 9aae34a03f16047b5e795b0dcd9b717f87c54355a9928889f629f3bb06bd7e63
SHA1
- c6abd5edb40444ce3fbc8564051545161cd85495
- 717a9f6e07a30d7463dfad28a9c95e202f19e066
- e636eae3cda02f39076f0e4acaad20115487d575
- 0125a0caaf2ff3da1266f1893cf051ddca6460fa
- 36cbc7c1b2da094b773614d251704e4c2bb0e88e
Remediation
- Block the threat indicators at their respective controls.
- Do not click on URLs and files attached in untrusted emails.
- Do not download software from random sources on the internet.
- Keep all software upgraded to latest patched versions.