Malware
Malicious Memes that Communicate with Malware
We recently discovered malicious actors using steganography on memes. It should be noted that the malware was not downloaded from Twitter and that we did not observe what specific mechanism was used to deliver the malware to its victims.
Steganography, or the method used to conceal a malicious payload inside an image to evade security solutions, has long been used by cybercriminals to spread malware and perform other malicious operations. We recently discovered malicious actors using this technique on memes. The malware authors have posted two tweets featuring malicious memes on October 25 and 26 via a Twitter account created in 2017. The memes contain an embedded command that is parsed by the malware after it's downloaded from the malicious Twitter account onto the victim’s machine, acting as a C&C service for the already- placed malware. It should be noted that the malware was not downloaded from Twitter and that we did not observe what specific mechanism was used to deliver the malware to its victims. The malware connected to this malicious meme has been proactively blocked by Trend Micro machine learning and behavioural detection technology at the time of discovery.
This new threat (detected as TROJAN.MSIL.BERBOMTHUM.AA) is notable because the malware’s commands are received via a legitimate service (which is also a popular social networking platform), employs the use of benign-looking yet malicious memes, and it cannot be taken down unless the malicious Twitter account is disabled. Twitter has already taken the account offline as of December 13, 2018.
Hidden inside the memes mentioned above is the “/print” command, which enables the malware to take screenshots of the infected machine. The screenshots are sent to a C&C server whose address is obtained through a hard-coded URL on pastebin.com.
Analyzing the Malware
We found that once the malware has been executed on an infected machine, it will be able to download the malicious memes from the Twitter account to the victim’s machine. It will then extract the given command. In the case of the “print” command hidden in the memes, the malware takes a screenshot of the infected machine. It then obtains the control server information from Pastebin. Afterwards, the malware sends out the collected information or the command output to the attacker by uploading it to a specific URL address.
During analysis, we saw that the Pastebin URL points to an internal or private IP address, which is possibly a temporary placeholder used by the attackers.
The malware then parses the content of the malicious Twitter account and begins looking for an image file using the pattern: “<img src=\(.*?):thumb\" width=\".*?\" height=\".*?\"/>” on the account.
At the time of analysis, the two memes (DqVe1PxWoAIQ44B.jpg and DqfU9sZWoAAlnFh.jpg) contained the command “print”. The embedded commands instruct the malware to perform various operations on the infected machine, such as capture screenshots, collect system information, amongst others, as described below.
Once the malware downloads the image, it attempts to extract the command that starts with the ‘/’ character.
The following is the list of commands supported by this malware:
Commands | Description |
Screen capture | |
/processos | Retrieve list of running processes |
/clip | Capture clipboard content |
/username | Retrieve username from infected machine |
/docs | Retrieve filenames from a predefined path such as (desktop, %AppData% etc.) |
Trend Micro Solutions
Users and businesses can consider adopting security solutions that can protect systems from various threats, such as malware that communicate with benign-looking images, through a cross-generational blend of threat defence techniques. Trend Micro endpoint solutions such as the Smart Protection Suites and Worry-Free Business Security solutions can protect users and businesses from threats by detecting malicious files and messages as well as blocking all related malicious URLs. Trend Micro™ Deep Discovery™ has an email inspection layer that can protect enterprises by detecting malicious attachments and URLs.
These solutions are powered by Trend MicroTM XGenTM security, which provides high-fidelity machine learning that secures the gateway and endpoint, and protects physical, virtual, and cloud workloads. With technologies that employ web/URL filtering, behavioural analysis, and custom sandboxing, XGen security offers protection against ever-changing threats that bypass traditional controls and exploit known and unknown vulnerabilities.
Indicators of Compromise
Related Hashes (SHA-256)
- 003673cf045faf0141b0bd00eff13542a3a62125937ac27b80c9ffd27bb5c722
- 3579d609cf4d0c8b469682eb7ff6c65aec634942fa56d47b666db7aa99a2ee3ef
- 88b06e005ecfab28cfdbcab98381821d7cc82bb140894b7fdc5445a125coe1a8c
- 8cdb574ba6fcaea32717c36b47fec0309fcd5c6d7b0f9a58fc546b74fc42cacd