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Security Parrot - Cyber Security News, Insights and Reviews > News > TrickBot developers is linked with Diavol ransomware
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TrickBot developers is linked with Diavol ransomware

Last updated: 2021/07/06 at 7:57 AM
Jim Koohyar Biniyaz Published July 6, 2021
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Fortinet specialists published a report in which they report that the creators of the well-known malware TrickBot (this hack group is usually called the Wizard Spider) may be involved in the development of a new ransomware Diavol.

Payloads of ransomware Diavol and Conti were deployed on various systems in early June 2021. It is noted that these ransomware are very similar and have a lot in common, from using asynchronous I / O operations during file encryption, to using almost identical command line parameters for the same functions (for example, creating logs, encrypting disks and network resources, network scanning).

However, experts still could not find a direct connection between the Diavol ransomware and the authors of TrickBot, moreover, they found a number of important different ones. For example, Diavol does not have built-in checks that prevent payload from being triggered on systems in Russia and the CIS countries. Also, the new malware does not steal data before encryption.

 “The parameters used by the attackers, along with errors in the hard-coded configuration, hint that Diavol is a new tool in the arsenal of its operators, to which they are not yet fully accustomed,” the researchers write.

Meanwhile, the other day Kryptos Logic announced that it had found changes in the code of the TrickBot malware itself. According to experts, since June 2021, TrickBot has been launching a new module on infected machines containing an updated version of the old banking component that tries to steal e-banking login credentials.

This component has been rewritten and now includes new methods for injecting malicious code into bank websites. Experts suggest that the new code is copied from the old Zeus banker: injections work by proxying traffic through a local SOCKS server. If online banking login pages are encountered in traffic, the traffic is modified to steal credentials or perform other malicious actions. It is assumed that in this way the developers of TrickBot are trying to compete with other banking Trojans and entice some of their customers.

TrickBot has brought back their bank fraud module, which has been updated to support Zeus-style webinjects. This could suggest they are resuming their bank fraud operation, and plan to expand access to those unfamiliar with their internal webinject format. https://t.co/YrS2bVZ0Xt

— Marcus Hutchins (@MalwareTechBlog) July 1, 2021

TrickBot is one of the largest and most successful malware threats to date. Malware was first spotted back in 2015, shortly after a series of high-profile arrests that significantly changed the composition of the Dyre hack group.

Over the years, malware has evolved from a classic banking Trojan designed to steal funds from bank accounts to a multifunctional dropper that spreads other threats (from miners to ransomware and info-stealers).

In the fall of 2020, a large-scale operation was carried out  aimed at eliminating TrickBot. It was attended by law enforcement agencies, specialists from the Microsoft Defender team, the non-profit organization FS-ISAC, as well as ESET, Lumen, NTT and Symantec. At that time, many experts wrote that although Microsoft was able to disable the TrickBot infrastructure , most likely the botnet will “survive” and eventually its operators will put into operation new control servers and continue their activity. Unfortunately, this is exactly what happened.

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Jim Koohyar Biniyaz July 6, 2021
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