General
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Target
ccda8247360a85b6c076527e438a995757b6cdf5530f38e125915d31291c00d5.bin.sample
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Size
1.0MB
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Sample
241112-t3fsbazmaj
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MD5
56f673b1d3d65dce3ef3c8754098df04
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SHA1
41323075a7dc590f20a154f503e089d2dac2fd12
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SHA256
ccda8247360a85b6c076527e438a995757b6cdf5530f38e125915d31291c00d5
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SHA512
8496c865cd0ec11b82d2d34d831c94bdd621f7a677f245bf098bc1adc57b6a6fbc249c452ccff24a3199348531643b82da3ee7583790044d6ed42f25d42724d1
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SSDEEP
12288:Vpp+QIEmDzuImC01vbUE98pik+2i1NkshdMMK+AX99etq2dTdjf:Vpp+Q+u5bUI8pij1NkshdMf99etb5R
Static task
static1
Behavioral task
behavioral1
Sample
ccda8247360a85b6c076527e438a995757b6cdf5530f38e125915d31291c00d5.bin.exe
Resource
win7-20240903-en
Behavioral task
behavioral2
Sample
ccda8247360a85b6c076527e438a995757b6cdf5530f38e125915d31291c00d5.bin.exe
Resource
win10v2004-20241007-en
Malware Config
Extracted
C:\PerfLogs\Admin\akira_readme.txt
akira
https://akiral2iz6a7qgd3ayp3l6yub7xx2uep76idk3u2kollpj5z3z636bad.onion
https://akiralkzxzq2dsrzsrvbr2xgbbu2wgsmxryd4csgfameg52n7efvr2id.onion
Targets
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Target
ccda8247360a85b6c076527e438a995757b6cdf5530f38e125915d31291c00d5.bin.sample
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Size
1.0MB
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MD5
56f673b1d3d65dce3ef3c8754098df04
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SHA1
41323075a7dc590f20a154f503e089d2dac2fd12
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SHA256
ccda8247360a85b6c076527e438a995757b6cdf5530f38e125915d31291c00d5
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SHA512
8496c865cd0ec11b82d2d34d831c94bdd621f7a677f245bf098bc1adc57b6a6fbc249c452ccff24a3199348531643b82da3ee7583790044d6ed42f25d42724d1
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SSDEEP
12288:Vpp+QIEmDzuImC01vbUE98pik+2i1NkshdMMK+AX99etq2dTdjf:Vpp+Q+u5bUI8pij1NkshdMf99etb5R
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Akira
Akira is a ransomware first seen in March 2023 and targets several industries, including education, finance, real estate, manufacturing, and consulting.
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Akira family
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Process spawned unexpected child process
This typically indicates the parent process was compromised via an exploit or macro.
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Renames multiple (8640) files with added filename extension
This suggests ransomware activity of encrypting all the files on the system.
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Boot or Logon Autostart Execution: Active Setup
Adversaries may achieve persistence by adding a Registry key to the Active Setup of the local machine.
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Command and Scripting Interpreter: PowerShell
Run Powershell command to delete shadowcopy.
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Drops startup file
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Drops desktop.ini file(s)
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Drops file in System32 directory
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