Monday, April 28, 2025
HomeComputer SecurityPoetRAT - New Python RAT Attacking Government and Energy Sector Via Weaponized...

PoetRAT – New Python RAT Attacking Government and Energy Sector Via Weaponized Word Documents

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

A new malware campaign uses word documents to drop malware on the victim machines that allow attackers to gain remote access over the machine.

Security researchers from Cisco Talos observed the malware campaign it targets citizens Azerbaijan, Government, and Energy Sectors.

The campaign uses COVID-19 lures and it is a highly targeted one, it primarily targets the public and the private sectors as well as SCADA systems.

- Advertisement - Google News

PoetRAT Python-based RAT

The malware named PoetRAT as it references to William Shakespeare, the RAT helps attackers to maintain control over the computer and to exfiltrate sensitive data.

The RAT has tools to monitor the hard disk and to exfiltrate the data automatically, along with that it has additional RAT features such as keyloggers, browser-focused password stealers, camera control applications, and other generic password stealers.

The threat actor uses Word documents to drop the malware, once the word document is opened the macro will get executed and starts extracting the malware.

Multiple campaigns observed, in one of the campaign, the word document contains blurred scripts and mimic to be from the Ministry of Defence of India.

In another campaign the documents include some realistic stats of the Corona Virus, once the document is opened the dropped gets downloaded from the URL “hxxps://gov-az[.]herokuapp[.]com/content/Azerbaijan_special[.]doc.”

In both of the campaigns, the dropper is the Word document and the process is innovative, researchers observed that “starts by loading its own document into memory. Afterward, it copies 7,074,638 bytes from the end of the file and writes the remaining bytes back to the disk.”

The downloaded zip file “smile.zip” contains Python interpreter and Python script which is actually the RAT. Before launching the RAT checks for the execution environment.

During the campaign the attackers also placed some additional tools;

Dog – To exfiltrate data through an email account or an FTP
Bewmac – To record webcam session
Klog.exe – A keylogger
Browdec.exe – A browser credential-stealer
voStro.exe – credential stealer
Tre.py – script to create additional files/directories
WinPwnage – Open-source framework of privilege escalation
Nmap – Open-source network-scanning tool

Researchers observed that the same server is used to launch a phishing attack also, aimed to steal login credentials.

According to the analysis “attacker wanted to gain a full picture of the victim by using a keylogger, browser credential stealers and Mimikatz and pypykatz for further credential harvesting”.

Related Read

CoronaVirus Cyber Attack Panic – Threat Actors Targets Victims Worldwide

Chinese APT Hackers Exploit MS Word Bug to Drop Malware Via Weaponized Coronavirus Lure Documents

How Can The Coronavirus (COVID-19) Disrupt Cybersecurity Operations?

Gurubaran
Gurubaran
Gurubaran is a co-founder of Cyber Security News and GBHackers On Security. He has 10+ years of experience as a Security Consultant, Editor, and Analyst in cybersecurity, technology, and communications.

Latest articles

Advanced Multi-Stage Carding Attack Hits Magento Site Using Fake GIFs and Reverse Proxy Malware

A multi-stage carding attack has been uncovered targeting a Magento eCommerce website running an...

Hannibal Stealer: Cracked Variant of Sharp and TX Malware Targets Browsers, Wallets, and FTP Clients

A new cyber threat, dubbed Hannibal Stealer, has surfaced as a rebranded and cracked...

Rack Ruby Framework Vulnerabilities Let Attackers Inject and Manipulate Log Content

Researchers Thai Do and Minh Pham have exposed multiple critical vulnerabilities in the Rack...

SAP NetWeaver 0-Day Flaw Actively Exploited to Deploy Webshells

SAP disclosed a critical zero-day vulnerability, identified as CVE-2025-31324, in its NetWeaver Visual Composer component. This...

Resilience at Scale

Why Application Security is Non-Negotiable

The resilience of your digital infrastructure directly impacts your ability to scale. And yet, application security remains a critical weak link for most organizations.

Application Security is no longer just a defensive play—it’s the cornerstone of cyber resilience and sustainable growth. In this webinar, Karthik Krishnamoorthy (CTO of Indusface) and Phani Deepak Akella (VP of Marketing – Indusface), will share how AI-powered application security can help organizations build resilience by

Discussion points


Protecting at internet scale using AI and behavioral-based DDoS & bot mitigation.
Autonomously discovering external assets and remediating vulnerabilities within 72 hours, enabling secure, confident scaling.
Ensuring 100% application availability through platforms architected for failure resilience.
Eliminating silos with real-time correlation between attack surface and active threats for rapid, accurate mitigation

More like this

Advanced Multi-Stage Carding Attack Hits Magento Site Using Fake GIFs and Reverse Proxy Malware

A multi-stage carding attack has been uncovered targeting a Magento eCommerce website running an...

Hannibal Stealer: Cracked Variant of Sharp and TX Malware Targets Browsers, Wallets, and FTP Clients

A new cyber threat, dubbed Hannibal Stealer, has surfaced as a rebranded and cracked...

Obfuscation Techniques: A Key Weapon in the Ongoing War Between Hackers and Defenders

Obfuscation stands as a powerful weapon for attackers seeking to shield their malicious code...