Wednesday, May 1, 2024

DanaBot Banking Trojan Evolves Again – Steals Email Address From Victim’s Mailbox

DanaBot Banking Trojan came out with new features which harvest email addresses from the victim’s mailbox and send out spam emails.

This Trojan turned out to be the latest example for the malware which focused on stealing useful information rather than demanding ransom from victims. The campaign primarily focuses on corporate and public administration emails.

DanaBot Banking Trojan Gets into Email Spam

In September 2018, ESET researchers noticed that the trojan used web injections against users of an unnamed Italian mail service.

An investigation has shown that malicious javascript embedded in the pages of webmail services fall into two categories.

First, DanaBot collects email addresses from the victim’s existing mailboxes and sends all the collected information to the C&C server.

Secondly, if the mail service is based on Open-Xchange, the Trojan injects a Javascript that covertly sends spam from the victim mailbox.

The mail attachment includes ZIP file which contains a decoy PDF document and a malicious VBS file, Once the VBS file executes, it downloads more malware using PowerShell cmd.

Code creating an email and adding a malicious ZIP attachment

This trojan includes a significant amount of junk code including instructions, conditional statements, and loops.

To prevent researchers and automated tools from easily understanding the code’s purpose, the trojan uses Windows API function hashing and encrypted strings.

ESET Researchers found that the links between DanaBot and GootKit. Matches were also noticed in the subnet of C&C servers and the strange similarity of domains used by the attacker.

Researchers said DanaBot uses exactly the same scripts that used in BackSwap trojan including the namings and locations of scripts in the server.

Check out the details about targeted webmail services, list of active C&C servers, targeted domains, IoCs which were shared by ESET.

You can follow us on Linkedin, Twitter, Facebook for daily Cybersecurity updates also you can take the Best Cybersecurity courses online to keep your self-updated.

Website

Latest articles

Google Guide! How to Detect Browser Data Theft Using Windows Event Logs

In the ever-evolving cybersecurity landscape, Google is continually striving to protect user data from...

Millions of Malicious “Imageless” Docker Hub Repositories Drop Malware

In a startling revelation, nearly 20% of Docker Hub repositories have been identified as...

Attackers Leverage Sidecar Container Injection Technique To Stay Stealthy

Kubernetes (K8s) is an open-source container orchestration platform designed to automate application container deployment,...

How to Utilize Azure Logs to Identify Threats: Insights From Microsoft

Microsoft's Azure platform is a highly acclaimed and widely recognized solution that organizations worldwide...

Redline Malware Using Lua Bytecode to Challenge the SOC/TI Team to Detect

The first instance of Redline using such a method is in a new variant...

Threat Actor Claims Selling of Dell Database with 49M User Records

A threat actor reportedly sells a database containing 49 million user records from Dell,...

Google Blocks 2.28M Malicious Apps Entering The Play Store

A safe and trusted Google Play experience is our top priority.We leverage our...
Vinugayathri
Vinugayathrihttps://gbhackers.com
Vinugayathri is a Senior content writer of Indusface. She has been an avid reader & writer in the tech domain since 2015. She has been a strategist and analyst of upcoming tech trends and their impact on the Cybersecurity, IoT, and AI landscape. She is a content marketer simplifying technical anomalies for aspiring Entrepreneurs.

WAAP/WAF ROI Analysis

Mastering WAAP/WAF ROI Analysis

As the importance of compliance and safeguarding critical websites and APIs grows, Web Application and API Protection (WAAP) solutions play an integral role.
Key takeaways include:

  • Pricing models
  • Cost Estimation
  • ROI Calculation

Related Articles