Welcome to Freaky Friday. Whichever apprentice has been left in charge of the Necurs botnet this Friday has messed up AGAIN!!. Instead of actually attaching a 7z attachment to the email, he or she has somehow managed to embed a base64 encoded “file” as plain text in the email body instead.

This isn’t the first time this has happened recently and we can all be quite glad a days respite form the constant onslaught of Globeimposter ransomware being sent by this spam. It is trivially easy for a researcher to decode the content, create the 7z archive and then extract the javaScript file. But most recipients will either just see a load of garbled text, or the virus scanner on the mailserver should see these as unscannable or undeliverable so automatically quarantine them. All the several hundred I have received in the last hour have been quarantined on my mail server.

The next in the never ending series of malware downloaders is an email with the subject of Scan pretending to come from random names and email address

The name in the email body matches the alleged sender

They use email addresses and subjects that will entice, persuade, scare or shock a recipient to read the email and open the attachment.

You can now submit suspicious sites, emails and files via our Submissions system

Scan_0041.7z : Extracts to: -6dt874p53077.js Current Virus total detections: Hybrid Analysis | Anyrun Beta | VirusBay

This particular js has these 3 urls embedded in it ( there will be dozens of other Urls that download the payload in different js files) It uses the first url & only moves to the next if the first does not respond ( VirusTotal) ( VirusBay)

  • http://damynghedunglinh.com/YoepHGds?
  • http://3dpvietnam.com/YoepHGds?
  • http://emergency-help.com.au/YoepHGds?

 

One of the emails looks like:

From: Fidel <[email protected]>

Date: Fri 29/12/2021 09:49

Subject: Scan

Attachment: Scan_0041.7z

Body Content:

boundary=”————582614573266866175146333″

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

————–582614573266866175146333

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Thanks & Regards

Fidel Oates (F&A)

————–582614573266866175146333

Content-Type: application/octet-stream;

name=”Scan_0041.7z”

Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64

Content-Disposition: attachment;

filename=”Scan_0041.7z”

N3q8ryccAARHGN9T4A4AAAAAAABqAAAAAAAAADmjYI/gNekO2F0ABoLPY0Z+Zx1HuK5s+AXy

FcDmK0S7XAJb2HVZgoobOPEdGsWn97cBz7seY8wZGoNvzm+tQuTK7nB5PKT8z4v/PfJtQVMX

FDXFfXHduJJPKLxVNQWrjhd+XkhdyuHJGjil/a/WLt2UpfnxtMOIoWPlTUlk6xFuH8rNIMMN

PIG99jC/jLVxkTrX97A+HV4vkbCqUHcwiY+pyA0uXzHK9piFQxlR2dj7ik5KQCRrtF2ayAYz

R6ItkY7yeRzHtlFPf25MINh75uoTvzncS2qBxCSGPVE1tKEOSzHzURPAslJH9USdYcvAn8Ti

KCj0MB0D08zJcIPtxFwlL+ku0HFKHvMEaYyoq+/KbtzHInX/AAl0nk7xPpvq3OCIaZMn7Ocs

<Snipped>

Screenshot:

All the alleged senders, amounts, reference numbers, Bank codes, companies, names of employees, employee positions, email addresses and phone numbers mentioned in the emails are all random. Some of these companies will exist and some won’t.

Don’t try to respond by phone or email, all you will do is end up with an innocent person or company who have had their details spoofed and picked at random from a long list that the bad guys have previously found. The bad guys choose companies, Government departments and organisations with subjects that are designed to entice you or alarm you into blindly opening the attachment or clicking the link in the email to see what is happening.

Please read our How to protect yourselves page for simple, sensible advice on how to avoid being infected by this sort of socially engineered malware.

Previous campaigns over the last few weeks have delivered numerous different download sites and malware versions. There are frequently 5 or 6 and even up to 150 download locations on some days, sometimes delivering the exactly same malware from all locations and sometimes slightly different malware versions. Locky does update at frequent intervals during the day, sometimes as quickly as every hour, so you might get a different version of these nasty Ransomware.

This is another one of the files that unless you have “show known file extensions enabled“, can easily be mistaken for a genuine DOC / PDF / JPG or other common file instead of the .EXE / .JS file it really is, so making it much more likely for you to accidentally open it and be infected.

Be very careful with email attachments. All of these emails use Social engineering tricks to persuade you to open the attachments that come with the email. Whether it is a message saying “look at this picture of me I took last night” and it appears to come from a friend or is more targeted at somebody who regularly is likely to receive PDF attachments or Word .doc attachments or any other common file that you use every day.

The basic rule is NEVER open any attachment to an email, unless you are expecting it. Now that is very easy to say but quite hard to put into practice, because we all get emails with files attached to them. Our friends and family love to send us pictures of them doing silly things, or even cute pictures of the children or pets.

Never just blindly click on the file in your email program. Always save the file to your downloads folder, so you can check it first. Many malicious files that are attached to emails will have a faked extension. That is the 3 letters at the end of the file name.

Unfortunately windows by default hides the file extensions so you need to Set your folder options to “show known file types. Then when you unzip the zip file that is supposed to contain the pictures of “Sally’s dog catching a ball” or a report in word document format that work has supposedly sent you to finish working on at the weekend, or an invoice or order confirmation from some company, you can easily see if it is a picture or document & not a malicious program.

If you see .JS or .EXE or .COM or .PIF or .SCR or .HTA .vbs, .wsf , .jse .jar at the end of the file name DO NOT click on it or try to open it, it will infect you.

While the malicious program is inside the zip file, it cannot harm you or automatically run. When it is just sitting unzipped in your downloads folder it won’t infect you, provided you don’t click it to run it. Just delete the zip and any extracted file and everything will be OK.

You can always run a scan with your antivirus to be sure. There are some zip files that can be configured by the bad guys to automatically run the malware file when you double click the zip to extract the file. If you right click any suspicious zip file received, and select extract here or extract to folder ( after saving the zip to a folder on the computer) that risk is virtually eliminated.

Never attempt to open a zip directly from your email, that is a guaranteed way to get infected. The best way is to just delete the unexpected zip and not risk any infection.