Ransomware Recap: Sept. 23, 2016
Businesses in Australia and New Zealand were recently in the crosshairs of ransomware attacks involving Crysis (detected by Trend Micro as Ransom_CRYSIS.A), a family first seen in February of 2015. Last week, Trend Micro researchers noted how this particular ransomware family has been taking on new targets via remote desktop protocol (RDP) brute force attacks—a behavior first observed in August.
According to the researchers, this a deviation from the common infection vectors utilized by this ransomware family. Crysis has been previously known to arrive as an infected attachment with double file extensions to mask the malware, and distributed in various spam campaigns or via embedded links to compromised websites.
[Related: Ransomware and spam]
However, the use of brute-forced RDPs, has been seen as a lucrative option for operators. Researchers discovered Crysis used in attacks that involve brute-forced RDP credentials with the ransomware executed through a redirected drive coming from the source machine.
Crysis attacks weren't the first time cybercriminals leveraged RDPs in ransomware attacks. Past incidents show that the method has already been used by those targeting businesses. In October 2015, perpetrators behind LowLevel04 ransomware (detected by Trend Micro as Ransom_LEVELO.A) reportedly brute-forced RDP credentials before manually downloading and installing the malware in the target’s systems. Just like Crysis, it has the capability of scanning mapped networks and removable drives and then encrypting files found in them.
Here are the other notable ransomware stories from the past week:
Black Feather and Dev-Nightmare
Around the same time last week, Dev-Nightmare (detected by Trend Micro as Ransom_HiddenTearDevNightmare.A) surfaced. After infecting a target’s system, this particular ransomware encrypts and appends a .2xx9 extension to its locked files. The ransom note on display shows a ransom demand that ranges between .5 to 1.5 bitcoins (at the time of writing, 1 bitcoin is equivalent to $US600). The ransom note also displays an email address meant for a victim to communicate with the developers.
Cyber Splitter
Erebus
While newer families and updated variants continue to make news, a multi-layered approach that safeguards all possible gateways of compromise should be protected, as the best way to prevent ransomware from entering the network. Maintaining regular backups of important files is also the best way to mitigate the damage caused by a ransomware infection.
Ransomware Solutions
Trend Micro offers different solutions to protect enterprises, small businesses, and home users to help minimize the risk of getting affected by ransomware:
Enterprises can benefit from a multi-layered, step-by-step approach in order to best mitigate the risks brought by these threats. Email and web gateway solutions such as Trend Micro™ Deep Discovery™ Email Inspector and InterScan™ Web Security prevents ransomware from ever reaching end users. At the endpoint level, Trend Micro Smart Protection Suites deliver several capabilities like behavior monitoring and application control, and vulnerability shielding that minimize the impact of this threat. Trend Micro Deep Discovery Inspector detects and blocks ransomware on networks, while Trend Micro Deep Security™ stops ransomware from reaching enterprise servers–whether physical, virtual or in the cloud.
For small businesses, Trend Micro Worry-Free Services Advanced offers cloud-based email gateway security through Hosted Email Security. Its endpoint protection also delivers several capabilities such as behavior monitoring and real-time web reputation in order detect and block ransomware.
For home users, Trend Micro Security 10 provides robust protection against ransomware, by blocking malicious websites, emails, and files associated with this threat.
Users can likewise take advantage of our free tools such as the Trend Micro Lock Screen Ransomware Tool, which is designed to detect and remove screen-locker ransomware; as well as Trend Micro Crypto-Ransomware File Decryptor Tool, which can decrypt certain variants of crypto-ransomware without paying the ransom or the use of the decryption key.
Updated on October 6, 2016, 02:00 AM (UTC-7)
The post was updated to clarify the distribution method and behavior of the Erebus ransomware.
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