Thursday, April 18, 2024

Qealler – Heavily Obfuscated JAR-based Password Stealer Malware Delivered Through Invoice-related Files

A new highly obfuscated malware dubbed Qealler designed to steal sensitive information from the infected machine. The malware is written in java.

The initial attack starts with social engineering technique, attackers send the victim a malicious JAR file disguised as an invoice-related file, when the user double-clicks to open the file, then malware will get downloaded from a compromised site.

Zscaler initially observed the campaign on Jan 21, 2019, and the malware is active for more than 2 weeks.

The JAR files were heavily obfuscated using an open source command-line tool ProGuard that shrinks, optimizes and obfuscates Java code.

Upon execution of malware, a file will be downloaded and saved to %USERPROFILE% if the directory doesn’t exist it creates the directory and stores the file in the encrypted file in the same location.

%USERPROFILE%\a60fcc00\bda431f8\a90f3bcc\83e7cdf9 (/lib/7z)
%USERPROFILE%\a60fcc00\bda431f8\a90f3bcc\db2bf213 (/lib/qealler)

Along with the two downloaded files, a unique machine ID is generated in another file path. The 7z file contains a repackaged version of 7za[.]exe and additional DLL files.

The 7-zip executable is called by the main sample and the downloaded Qealler module is a password-protected file, that opens after applying the password.

Qealler

Executed Qealler module contains Python 2.7.12, in case python framework not present in the user system it will install the module and also creates a directory named QaZaqne.

The extracted Remittance[.]jar executes a python file main[.]py, which steals the credentials on an infected Windows machine. The scraped information from the C&C server is encrypted and encoded with BASE64 and sent to the command-and-control (C2) server.

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

Palo Alto ZeroDay Exploited in The Wild Following PoC Release

Palo Alto Networks has disclosed a critical vulnerability within its PAN-OS operating system, identified...

FIN7 Hackers Attacking IT Employees Of Automotive Industry

IT employees in the automotive industry are often targeted by hackers because they have...

Russian APT44 – The Most Notorious Cyber Sabotage Group Globally

As Russia's invasion of Ukraine enters its third year, the formidable Sandworm (aka FROZENBARENTS,...

SoumniBot Exploiting Android Manifest Flaws to Evade Detection

A new banker, SoumniBot, has recently been identified. It targets Korean users and is...

LeSlipFrancais Data Breach: Customers’ Personal Information Exposed

LeSlipFrancais, the renowned French underwear brand, has confirmed a data breach impacting its customer...

Cisco Hypershield: AI-Powered Hyper-Distributed Security for Data Center

Cisco has unveiled its latest innovation, Cisco Hypershield, marking a milestone in cybersecurity.This groundbreaking...

Phishing-as-a-Service Platform LabHost Seized by Authorities

Authorities have dismantled LabHost, a notorious cybercrime platform that facilitated widespread phishing attacks across...
Guru baran
Guru baranhttps://gbhackers.com
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.

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