Top 10 Malware February 2022

 

February 2022, the Top 10 stayed consistent with the previous month with the exception of Arechlient2, CryptoWall, and Delf. CryptoWall returned to the Top 10, while Arechclient2 and Delf made their first appearances. Arechclient2 is a .NET RAT with numerous capabilities including multiple stealth functions. Arechclient2 can profile victim systems, steal information such as browser and crypto-wallet data, and launch a hidden secondary desktop to control browser sessions. Additionally, it has several anti-VM and anti-emulator capabilities. Delf is a family of malware with multiple variants written in the Delphi programming language, where most are downloaders. Campaigns, targets, infection vectors and capabilities vary based on the variant. Delf has multiple initial infection vectors, such as: dropped, malspam, or unintentional downloaded from a malicious website. Some of the abilities Delf variants exhibit include: backdoor or proxy functionality, stealing information, terminating antivirus applications, and mass mailing. The Top 10 Malware variants comprise 72% of the total malware activity in February 2022, increasing 3% from January 2022. 

Malware Infection Vectors

The MS-ISAC tracks potential primary infection vectors for our Top 10 Malware each month based on open-source reporting, as depicted in the graph below. We currently track four initial infection vectors: Dropped, Malvertisement, Malspam, and Network. The MS-ISAC has not had any malware in the Top 10 use the initial infection vector Network in the past year. Some malware employ different vectors in different contexts and are thus tracked as Multiple.

In February 2022, Malvertisement accounted for the greatest number of alerts. Malvertisement remains the top initial infection vector due to Shlayer activity. Activity levels for Dropped and Malvertisement decreased, while activity for Multiple increased. Malspam activity stayed consistent with the previous month. It is likely that Malvertisement will remain the primary infection vector as the Shlayer campaign continues. The Multiple category increases and decreases seemingly sporadically, making it difficult to predict trends. Albeit, it will likely continue to make up a significant portion of the initial infection vectors as malware becomes more sophisticated and employs multiple methods to infect systems. Malspam consistently represents a portion of the Top 10 malware as it is one of the oldest and most reliable primary initial infection vectors used by cyber threat actors in both this category and the Multiple category. 

Top 10 Malware February 2022 Malware Notifications

Top 10 Malware February 2022 Malware Pie Chart

Top 10 Malware February 2022 Initial Infection Vectors

Dropped – Malware delivered by other malware already on the system, an exploit kit, infected third-party software, or manually by a cyber threat actor. Currently, Mirai is the only malware using this technique.

Multiple – Malware that currently favors at least two vectors. Currently, Arechclient2, CoinMiner, CryptoWall, Delf, RedLine, and ZeuS  are the malware utilizing multiple vectors.

Malspam – Unsolicited emails either direct users to malicious web sites or trick users into downloading or opening malware. Top 10 Malware using this technique include Agent Tesla and NanoCore.

Malvertisement – Malware introduced through malicious advertisements. Currently, Shlayer is the only Top 10 Malware using this technique.

Top 10 Malware and IOCs

Below are the Top 10 Malware ranked in order of prevalence. The respective indicators of compromise (IOCs) are provided to aid in detecting and preventing infections from these Top 10 Malware variants. Note: The associated URIs are aligned with malware’s respective domain(s) or IP(s) and increase the likelihood of maliciousness when found together. The URIs alone are not inherently malicious.  

1. Shlayer

Shlayer is a downloader and dropper for MacOS malware. It is primarily distributed through malicious websites, hijacked domains, and malvertizing posing as a fake Adobe Flash updater.
All Shlayer domains follow the same pattern <api.random_name.com>. Below area several examples of domains Shlayer uses.

Domains

  •  api[.]interfacecache[.]com
  • api[.]scalableunit[.]com
  • api[.]typicalconfig[.]com
  • api[.]standartanalog[.]com
  • api[.]fieldenumerator[.]com
  • api[.]practicalsprint[.]com
  • api[.]searchwebsvc[.]com
  • api[.]connectedtask[.]com
  • api[.]navigationbuffer[.]com
  • api[.]windowtask[.]com

2. CoinMiner

CoinMiner is a cryptocurrency miner family that typically uses Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) and EternalBlue to spread across a network. Additionally, it typically uses the WMI Standard Event Consumer scripting to execute scripts for persistence. However, due to multiple variants of this malware, capabilities may vary. CoinMiner spreads through malspam or is dropped by other malware.

3. NanoCore

NanoCore is a RAT spread via malspam as a malicious Excel XLS spreadsheet. As a RAT, NanoCore can accept commands to download and execute files, visit websites, and add registry keys for persistence.

 4. Agent Tesla

Agent Tesla is a RAT that exfiltrate credentials, log keystrokes, and capture screenshots from an infected computer.

5. ZeuS

ZeuS is a modular banking trojan which uses keystroke logging to compromise victim credentials when the user visits a banking website. Since the release of the ZeuS source code in 2011, many other malware variants have adopted parts of its codebase, which means that events classified as ZeuS may actually be other malware using parts of the ZeuS code.

6. Arechclient2

Arechclient2, aka SectopRAT, is a .NET RAT with numerous capabilities including multiple stealth functions. Arechclient2 can profile victim systems, steal information such as browser and crypto-wallet data, and launch a hidden secondary desktop to control browser sessions. Additionally, it has several anti-VM and anti-emulator capabilities.

7. Delf 

Delf is a family of malware with multiple variants written in the Delphi programming language, where most are downloaders. Campaigns, targets, infection vectors and capabilities vary based on the variant. Delf has multiple initial infection vectors, such as: dropped, malspam, or unintentional downloaded from a malicious website. Some of the abilities Delf variants exhibit include: backdoor or proxy functionality, stealing information, terminating antivirus applications, and mass mailing.

8. Mirai

Mirai is a malware botnet known to compromise Internet of Things (IoT) devices in order to conduct large-scale DDoS attacks. Mirai is dropped after an exploit has allowed the attacker to gain access to a machine.

9. CryptoWall

CryptoWall is a ransomware commonly distributed through malspam with malicious ZIP attachments, Java vulnerabilities, and malicious advertisements. Upon successful infection, CryptoWall will scan the system for drive letters, network shares, and removable drives. CryptoWall runs on both 32-bit and 64-bit systems. a PowerShell-based backdoor allowing the attacker to obtain the system’s hostname and to run commands. This backdoor communicates through a DNS tunneling channel on the compromised server.

10. RedLine

RedLine, is an infostealer available for purchase on cyber-criminal forums. Campaigns, targets, infection vectors and capabilities vary based on the version purchased. The malware typically targets information that can be easily monetized, such as credentials, cookies, banking information, and cryptocurrency wallet information. Additionally, the malware gathers information about the infected system such as web-browser, FTP clients, instant messengers, VPN services, and gaming clients.  Furthermore, RedLine has remote functionality allowing it to download further malicious tools or drop additional malware.