Rewterz Threat Alert – Chaos Ransomware – Active IOCs
February 12, 2023Rewterz Threat Alert – SmokeLoader Malware – Active IOCs
February 12, 2023Rewterz Threat Alert – Chaos Ransomware – Active IOCs
February 12, 2023Rewterz Threat Alert – SmokeLoader Malware – Active IOCs
February 12, 2023Severity
High
Analysis Summary
The STOP/DJVU ransomware initially made headlines in 2018 and has since been attacking individuals all around the world. It’s widespread on torrent sites and other platforms in software crack packages and adware bundles. The STOP/DJVU ransomware is a Trojan that encrypts files. It infiltrates your computer invisibly and encrypts all of your data, making them unavailable to you. It leaves a ransom letter warning which demands money in exchange for decrypting your data and making them available to you again. Malware is delivered via cracked applications, fake set-up apps keygens, activators, and Windows updates. It does not utilize local information like keyboard layouts or timezone settings to prevent infecting victims in certain countries; instead, it uses the information returned by a request to https[:]//api.2ip.ua/geo.json. The card’s MAC address is utilized to provide unique identification for the system. This identity is provided to STOP’s command and control server, which responded with an RSA-2048 public key for encryption. Additional malware, including an information stealer known as Vidar, is then downloaded and installed
Impact
- Information Theft
- File Encryption
Indicators of Compromise
MD5
- 546bd5b73d6424c4f1cab3f906dd208b
- 35681210de3f848707e16d15fe032f3b
- 38e31b1be1f167ad2d1d18c746a7c46f
- 2becc07b23585ab41b10d45a1f7e0d8a
- cd5df181c1ea27e3f45fdbf2a4d3f6ff
SHA-256
- 2afb9f063873ee26ac78c4ed2919f3cd67c6f623c5080956fd855fb583a6ec2f
- ea00e7aba317832fe7ee630e343d633389da5e1c1b08b4c1e41e77d2c80e242a
- 1ea58e232531253d8b99a2f419dcbf1d96801b85ac8c6c915be481f876599f22
- 4e3893ebbeba7316fc29052f28ea8c12e47b6ecd9f6162a0ce1fdab1881aa173
- 85ca2452c6b89c631d0cc400d75e3ee129c1a416f74a5a5e53ab9bdff2861882
SHA-1
- 547cc739d50e2e10a673a08ceb64dfd612dc5f32
- 96e93d496cf56b837e95c6c4d30f8731500f30a9
- e1eebc90dae5caab44c04e852e7c31461269ca58
- 8f0c3d18fe0473fefac413ba8ae494230094dbf7
- 533af8e223aac78aed2c58d872f3be995d103253
Remediation
- Block all threat indicators at your respective controls.
- Search for Indicators of compromise (IOCs) in your environment utilizing your respective security controls
- Maintain cyber hygiene by updating your anti-virus software and implementing a patch management lifecycle.
- Maintain Offline Backups – In a ransomware attack, the adversary will often delete or encrypt backups if they have access to them. That’s why it’s important to keep offline (preferably off-site), encrypted backups of data and test them regularly.
- Emails from unknown senders should always be treated with caution.
- Never trust or open ” links and attachments received from unknown sources/senders