Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Feedly:SANS Internet Storm Center, InfoCON: green. CryptXXX ransomware updated, (Wed, Jul 6th)



from SANS Internet Storm Center, InfoCON: green

Introduction

When generating exploit kit (EK) traffic earlier today, I noticed a change in post-infection activity on a Windows host infected with CryptXXX ransomware.  This happened after an infection caused by Neutrino EK triggered from the pseudoDarkleech campaign.


Shown above:  Flow chart for Neutrino EK/CryptXXX caused by pseudoDarkleech.

This morning, the decryption instructions for CryptXXX ransomware looked different.  A closer examination indicates CryptXXX has been updated.  As I write this, I haven't found anything online yet describing these recent changes, so this diary takes a quick look at the traffic.


Shown above:  An infected Windows desktop from earlier today.

Details

Today's EK traffic was on 198.71.54.211 using the same domain shadowing technique we've seen before from various campaigns using Neutrino EK (formerly using Angler EK [1, 2, 3] before Angler disappeared).  Post-infection traffic was over 91.220.131.147 on TCP port 443 using custom encoding, a method CryptXXX has used since it first appeared earlier this year [4].


Shown above:  Traffic from today's Neutrino EK/CryptXXX infection filtered in Wireshark.

Below are some screenshots of the Neutrino EK traffic.


Shown above:  Neutrino EK landing page.


Shown above:  Neutrino EK sends a Flash exploit.


Shown above:  Neutrino EK sends the payload (it's encrypted).

In a change of behavior, text and HTML files for the CryptXXX decryption instructions are downloaded in the clear during the post-infection traffic.


Shown above:  Text-based decryption instructions sent on 91.220.131.147 over TCP port 443.


Shown above:  HTML-based decryption instructions sent on 91.220.131.147 over TCP port 443.

I used my Security Onion setup to see what Snort-based alerts triggered.  Looks like the EmergingThreats team already have a signature covering the new CryptXXX post-infection traffic.


Shown above:  My results from Sguil on Security Onion using the ET Pro ruleset.

Below are two screenshots with HTML decryption instructions from the infected Windows host's desktop.

Final words

Although I haven't noticed anything yet, I'm sure some of the usual sources will have a more in-depth article on these recent changes in CryptXXX ransomware.  This diary is just meant to give everyone a heads-up.

Pcap and malware for this diary are located here.

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

References:

[1] http://ift.tt/1vYTywf
[2] http://ift.tt/29os6Q8
[3] http://ift.tt/21vnBFN
[4] http://ift.tt/1SoOn0t

Web Analytics