General
-
Target
[CRACKNET.NET]PW12345.Fireeye_Agent_11_8_crack_by_orion.exe
-
Size
8.1MB
-
Sample
210217-l1bvrqp6e2
-
MD5
244bb7935d2fec3494b7faf2f315e40e
-
SHA1
60fb433cc7557003dd0596a0e935b64909b8ab89
-
SHA256
cccf598d56193b450a92c6582293991fd28cdf1e66f6b8e19a4a4c946bffc1e1
-
SHA512
d199f8a7422ef7ae58514af3a9dbb5c1921b7af240021435281dd573e38a31cf23f7490427c52b70ec2d2e54df6cb026711441ebd1fb316cd6bc2c59a412a58e
Static task
static1
Behavioral task
behavioral1
Sample
[CRACKNET.NET]PW12345.Fireeye_Agent_11_8_crack_by_orion.exe
Resource
win10v20201028
Malware Config
Extracted
azorult
http://kvaka.li/1210776429.php
Extracted
raccoon
310b6bfba897d478c7212dc7fdbe942b00728875
-
url4cnc
https://telete.in/j9ca1pel
Targets
-
-
Target
[CRACKNET.NET]PW12345.Fireeye_Agent_11_8_crack_by_orion.exe
-
Size
8.1MB
-
MD5
244bb7935d2fec3494b7faf2f315e40e
-
SHA1
60fb433cc7557003dd0596a0e935b64909b8ab89
-
SHA256
cccf598d56193b450a92c6582293991fd28cdf1e66f6b8e19a4a4c946bffc1e1
-
SHA512
d199f8a7422ef7ae58514af3a9dbb5c1921b7af240021435281dd573e38a31cf23f7490427c52b70ec2d2e54df6cb026711441ebd1fb316cd6bc2c59a412a58e
-
Azorult
An information stealer that was first discovered in 2016, targeting browsing history and passwords.
-
RedLine
RedLine Stealer is a malware family written in C#, first appearing in early 2020.
-
RedLine Payload
-
Nirsoft
-
Executes dropped EXE
-
Loads dropped DLL
-
Reads data files stored by FTP clients
Tries to access configuration files associated with programs like FileZilla.
-
Reads user/profile data of local email clients
Email clients store some user data on disk where infostealers will often target it.
-
Reads user/profile data of web browsers
Infostealers often target stored browser data, which can include saved credentials etc.
-
Accesses cryptocurrency files/wallets, possible credential harvesting
-
Adds Run key to start application
-
Checks installed software on the system
Looks up Uninstall key entries in the registry to enumerate software on the system.
-
Enumerates connected drives
Attempts to read the root path of hard drives other than the default C: drive.
-
Legitimate hosting services abused for malware hosting/C2
-
Looks up external IP address via web service
Uses a legitimate IP lookup service to find the infected system's external IP.
-
Writes to the Master Boot Record (MBR)
Bootkits write to the MBR to gain persistence at a level below the operating system.
-
Suspicious use of NtSetInformationThreadHideFromDebugger
-
Suspicious use of SetThreadContext
-