ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, May 8th 2019 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail.html?id=6488

Email roulette, May 2019

Published: 2019-05-08. Last Updated: 2019-05-08 00:18:09 UTC
by Brad Duncan (Version: 1)
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Introduction

For today's diary I play a game of email roulette.  My version of email roulette is picking a recent item of malicious spam (malspam), running the associated email attachment in a live sandbox, and identifying the malware.  I acquired a recent malspam example through VirusTotal (VT) Intelligence.  Let's see what the roulette wheel give us today!

Searching for malspam attachments in VT Intelligence

VT Intelligence is a subscription server, and from what I understand, it's fairly expensive.  Fortunately I have access through my employer.  In the VT Intelligence search window, I used the following parameters:

tag:attachment fs:2019-05-07+ p:3+

This returned anything tagged as an email attachment, first seen on or after 2019-05-07, with at least 3 vendors identifying an item as malicious.  After the results appeared, I sorted by the most recent submissions.


Shown above:  Searching and sorting in the VT Intelligence portal.


Shown above:  Results sorted by most recent at the time of my search.

The three most recent results I saw were 7-zip archives (.7z files).  The file names did not use ASCII characters, but were base64 encoded.  The base64 string represents UTF-8 characters, where the format is name:"=?utf-8?B?[base64 string]?="

I picked the most recent result and selected the relations tab, which revealed the associated malspam.  Then I retrieved that email from VT Intelligence.


Shown above:  Pivoting on the attachment to find its parent email.


Shown above:  The email opened in Thunderbird on a Windows 7 host.

The attached 7-zip archive contained 3 files with different names, but they were all the same file hash, so they were the same malware.  I extracted them and ran one on a vulnerable Windows host.  The result was a Gandcrab ransomware infection.


Shown above:  Encrypted files and the ransom note on my infected Windows host.

Indicators

The following are indicators associated with this infection:

SHA256 hash: 39f97e750a8ebcc68a5392584c9fd8edc934e978d6495d3ae430cb7ee3275ffe

  • File size: 157,810 bytes
  • File description: Example of Korean malspam (.eml file) pushing Gandcrab

SHA256 hash: 5444841becddce7ef2601752df63db2a9d067d46a359d8b0288da2ebf494ff41

  • File size: 112,792 bytes
  • File description: 7-zip archive (.7z file) attached to Korean malspam

SHA256 hash: df53498804b4e7dbfb884a91df7f8b371de90d6908640886f929528f1d6bd0cc

  • File size: 173,568 bytes
  • File description: Gandcrab executables (.exe files) extracted from the above .7z archive
  • Any.Run sandbox analysis

Final words

This round of email roulette gave us a Gandcrab ransomware infection.  What type of malware might I find next?  Perhaps we'll know when I try this again next month for another diary.

---
Brad Duncan
brad [at] malware-traffic-analysis.net

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