Even if you keep your crypto assets in a cold wallet and use Apple devices — which enjoy a strong reputation for security — cybercriminals may still find a way to swipe your funds. These bad actors are combining well-known tricks into new attack chains — including baiting victims right inside the App Store.
Crypto-wallet clones
This past March, we discovered phishing apps at the top of the Chinese App Store charts with icons and names mimicking popular crypto-wallet management tools. Because regional restrictions block several official wallet apps from the Chinese App Store, attackers have stepped in to fill the void. They created fake apps using icons similar to the originals and names with intentional typos — likely to bypass App Store moderation and deceive users.
Phishing apps in the App Store appearing in search results for Ledger Wallet (formerly Ledger Live)
Beyond these, we found a number of apps with names and icons that had nothing to do with cryptocurrency. However, their promotional banners claimed they could be used to download and install official wallet apps that are otherwise unavailable in the regional App Store.
Banners on app pages claiming they can be used to download the official TokenPocket app, which is missing from the local App Store
In total, we identified 26 phishing apps mimicking the following popular wallets:
MetaMask
Ledger
Trust Wallet
Coinbase
TokenPocket
imToken
Bitpie
A few other very similar apps didn’t contain phishing functionality yet, but all signs point to them being linked to the same attackers. It’s likely they plan to add malicious features in future updates.
To get these apps cleared for the App Store, the developers added basic functionality, such as a game, a calculator, or a task planner.
Installing any of these clones is the first step toward losing your crypto assets. While the apps themselves don’t steal cryptocurrency, seed phrases, or passwords, they serve as bait that builds user trust by virtue of being listed on the official App Store. Once installed and launched, however, the app opens a phishing site in the victim’s browser, designed to look like the App Store, which then prompts the user to install a compromised version of the relevant crypto wallet. The attackers have created multiple versions of these malicious modules, each tailored to a specific wallet. You can find a detailed technical breakdown of this attack in our Securelist post.
A victim who falls for the ruse is first prompted to install a provisioning profile, which allows apps to be sideloaded onto an iPhone outside the App Store. The profile is then used to install the malicious app itself.
A fake App Store site prompting the user to install an app masquerading as Ledger Wallet
In the example above, the malware is built on the original Ledger app with integrated Trojan functionality. The app looks identical to the original, but when connected to a hardware wallet, it displays a window requiring a seed phrase, supposedly to restore access. This is not standard procedure: typically, you only need to enter a PIN — never a recovery phrase. If a victim is deceived by the app’s apparent legitimacy and enters their seed phrase, it’s immediately sent to the attackers’ server — granting them full access to the victim’s crypto assets.
Sideloading outside the App Store
A critical component of this scheme involves installing malware on the victim’s iPhone by bypassing the App Store and its verification process. This is executed much like the SparkKitty iOS infostealer we discovered previously. The attackers managed to gain access to the Apple Developer Enterprise Program. For just US$299 a year — and following an interview and corporate verification — this program allows entities to issue their own configuration profiles and apps for direct download to user devices without ever publishing them in the App Store.
To install the app, the victim must first install a configuration profile that enables the malware to be downloaded directly, bypassing the App Store. Note the green verification checkmark
In general, enterprise profiles are designed to allow organizations to deploy internal apps to employees’ devices. These apps don’t require App Store publication and can be installed on an unlimited number of devices. Unfortunately, this feature is often abused. These profiles are frequently used for software that fails to meet Apple’s policies, such as online casinos, pirated mods, and, of course, malware.
This is precisely why the fake site mimicking the Apple Store prompts the user to install a configuration profile before delivering the app signed by that profile.
Stealing cryptocurrency via macOS apps and extensions
Many crypto owners prefer managing their wallets on a computer rather than a smartphone — often choosing Macs for the task. It’s no surprise, then, that most popular macOS infostealers target crypto-wallet data in one way or another. Recently, however, a new malicious tactic has been gaining traction: in addition to stealing saved data, attackers are embedding phishing dialogs directly into legitimate wallet applications already installed on users’ computers. Earlier this year, the MacSync infostealer adopted this functionality. It infiltrates systems via ClickFix attacks: users searching for software are lured to fake sites with fraudulent instructions to install the app by running commands in Terminal. This executes the infostealer, which scrapes passwords and cookies saved in Chrome, chats from popular messengers, and data from browser-based crypto-wallet extensions.
But the most interesting part is what happens next. If the victim already has a legitimate Trezor or Ledger app installed, the infostealer downloads additional modules and… swaps out fragments of the app with its own trojanized code. The malware then re-signs the modified file so that after these “fixes” are made, Gatekeeper (a built-in protection mechanism in macOS) allows the application to run without an additional permission request from the user. While this trick doesn’t always work, it’s effective for simpler apps built on the popular Electron framework.
The trojanized app prompts the user for the seed phrase of their wallet
When the trojanized app is opened, it fakes an error and initiates a “recovery process”, prompting the user for their wallet seed phrase.
Time and again, attackers have proved that no gadget is truly invincible. With so many developers and cryptocurrency users preferring macOS and iOS, threat actors have designed and deployed industrial-scale attacks for both platforms. Staying safe requires in-depth defense backed by skepticism and vigilance.
Download apps only from trusted sources: either the developer’s official website or their App Store page. Since malware can slip even into official stores, always verify the app’s publisher.
Check the app’s rating, publication date, and download counter.
Read the reviews — especially the negative ones. Sort reviews by date to evaluate the latest version. Attackers often start with a perfectly innocent app that earns high ratings before introducing malicious functionality in a later update.
Never copy and paste commands into your Terminal unless you’re 100% certain what they do. These attacks have become very popular lately, often disguised as installation steps for AI apps like Claude Code or OpenClaw.
Use a comprehensive security system on all your computers and smartphones. We recommend Kaspersky Premium. This goes a long way to mitigate the risk of visiting phishing sites or installing malicious apps.
Never enter your seed phrase into a hardware wallet app, on a website, or in a chat. In every scenario, whether migrating to a new wallet, reinstalling apps, or recovering a wallet, the seed phrase should be entered exclusively on the hardware device itself — never in a mobile or desktop app.
Always verify the recipient’s address on the hardware wallet’s screen to prevent attacks involving address swapping.
Store your seed phrases in the most secure way possible, such as on a metal plate or in a sealed envelope in a safe deposit box. It’s best not to store them on a computer at all, but if that’s your only option, use a secure, encrypted vault like Kaspersky Password Manager.
Still believe that Apple devices are bulletproof? Think again as you read the following:
https://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.png00adminhttps://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.pngadmin2026-04-27 17:06:362026-04-27 17:06:36Phishing crypto-wallet clones in the App Store and other attacks on iOS and macOS crypto owners | Kaspersky official blog
https://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.png00adminhttps://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.pngadmin2026-04-25 07:06:332026-04-25 07:06:33The calm before the ransom: What you see is not all there is
Researchers from three universities in Hong Kong have published a paper demonstrating a method of eavesdropping through fiber-optic cables. Fiber optics have long been the gold standard for data transmission due to their ability to transfer information at high speeds over long distances. Fiber-optic cabling utilizes ultra-thin glass threads for transmission, and is widely used not only for backbone data lines but also for connecting individual premises. And as it turns out, these very glass threads are sensitive enough to vibrations that they subtly alter the parameters of the optical signal.
Potentially, this allows a fiber-optic cable to be turned into a microphone and intercept room conversations while being kilometers away from the sound source. In other words, this exploits so-called side channels — non-obvious characteristics of everyday home or office appliances that enable information leaks. Of course, this work is largely theoretical, much like other similar studies we’ve covered previously — eavesdropping through mouse sensors, using RAM modules as radio transmitters, exfiltrating data from CCTV sensors, or screen snooping through HDMI cables. However, several news outlets have reported on the Hong Kong researchers’ study as if it were a turnkey method, so let’s try to determine just how dangerous it really is in practice.
Hurdles of optical eavesdropping
The unique characteristics of fiber-optic cables were first considered back in 2012 by Russian researchers, who conceded the theoretical possibility of such an attack. The goal of the Hong Kong researchers was to demonstrate at least some level of practical implementation for eavesdropping.
Diagram of a provider’s fiber-optic network showing the location of the attacker and the room targeted for eavesdropping. Source
The diagram above illustrates a typical FTTH (fiber-to-the-home) network architecture, where end users or organizations connect directly to a fiber-optic cable. The ISP manages the so-called Optical Distribution Network (ODN), to which end-users are connected. The device on the user’s end is called an Optical Networking Unit (ONU).
An attack leveraging this equipment is quite difficult to execute. To eavesdrop on a specific ONU endpoint, a potential adversary would need access to the provider’s infrastructure and control over the ODN equipment. What exactly is this device? It’s a network router or an optical-to-Ethernet converter — a small box usually tucked away in an office utility closet. Inside the premises, connectivity is provided either by Wi-Fi or a local network using Ethernet cabling. Crucially, the fiber-optic cable is unlikely to run directly into a sensitive area like a CEO’s office — the very place where eavesdropping would be most relevant.
Schematic representation of the eavesdropping setup on the attacker’s side. Source
And here’s a rough idea of what the attacker’s equipment would look like. Using special tech, they send optical pulses down the fiber-optic cable and measure the parameters of their transmission. Minor vibrations from footsteps in a room near the cable and nearby conversations trigger an effect known as Rayleigh scattering. This effect, in turn, causes minute deviations in the reflected signal’s parameters, which are then captured on the attacker’s end using a photosensor.
Recording the sound of footsteps in a room through a fiber-optic cable. Source
Before moving on to voice recording, the researchers decided to test a simpler scenario. To streamline the task, they ran the fiber-optic cable around the perimeter of the room and recorded footsteps — which generate significant vibration — rather than quiet conversation. This experiment was quite successful — the footsteps were audible. However, human speech proved to be far more challenging to capture. It turned out that even in laboratory conditions, intercepting a conversation between two people was impossible. To make further stages of the attack possible, the researchers assumed the presence of a bug at the fiber’s entry point into the room. This module is essentially a microphone that converts audio signals into vibrations on the optical cable. This amplifies the signal, making it possible to intercept on the attacker’s side.
Not-so-obvious advantages
But wait — if we’re talking about planting a bug in a room, why go through all the trouble with fiber optics? Why not just have the bug transmit the conversation on its own through cellular data or the building’s landline — especially since it’s already sitting right on top of it? Because there’s a distinct advantage to the researchers’ proposed attack scenario.
A regular bug transmitting audio over a cellular network or through the internet is fairly easy to detect, whereas a transmitter relaying data via fiber-optic cable vibrations can operate much more stealthily. Such a tap would be relatively easy to implant during the installation of network equipment, and harder to detect using traditional bug-sweeping tools.
Another major benefit of this hypothetical attack is that the eavesdropping can take place kilometers away from the target room — the attacker wouldn’t have to put themselves at extra risk by being near the target. Theoretically, one could also imagine a scenario where a separate fiber-optic cable is run into a room solely for surveillance purposes without raising much suspicion from those being surveilled.
Practical takeaways
If we frame the question as, “Can attackers remotely eavesdrop on any room that has fiber-optic cabling?” the answer is no; it’s still impossible. However, this work by the Hong Kong researchers, which highlights quirks of a common data transmission medium, demonstrates a technically feasible — albeit unlikely and quite expensive to execute — scenario for a targeted attack.
https://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.png00adminhttps://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.pngadmin2026-04-24 21:06:452026-04-24 21:06:45Eavesdropping via fiber-optic cables | Kaspersky official blog
A new phishing campaign targeting Brazilian users demonstrates how modern financial malware has evolved from simple credential theft into full-scale, operator-driven fraud platforms. Disguised as a judicial summons, this campaign leverages social engineering, multi-stage malware delivery, and real-time remote access capabilities to compromise victims and actively assist attackers in financial theft.
For organizations, the implications extend beyond individual users. Employees accessing corporate systems, financial platforms, or crypto wallets from infected endpoints can unintentionally expose business-critical assets. The malware’s ability to stream screens, execute commands, and harvest credentials in real time makes it particularly dangerous for finance teams, executives, and organizations operating in or with Brazil.
This is not just phishing. It’s a live intrusion channel into financial workflows. Technical analysis below.
Attack Overview
The malware at the heart of this campaign, agenteV2, functions as a full interactive backdoor. Once installed, it streams the victim’s screen to the attacker in real time, enabling live, operator-assisted financial fraud. A human operator watches the victim’s desktop session as it happens, waiting for a banking portal to open, and then takes direct control.
The malware targets credentials and sessions at seven major Brazilian financial institutions — Itaú, Banco do Brasil, Caixa Econômica Federal, Bradesco, Santander, Inter, and Stone — as well as five major cryptocurrency wallet extensions. It also probes host systems for the presence of specialized Brazilian anti-fraud software (Diebold Warsaw, GbPlugin), indicating deliberate, well-researched targeting of the Brazilian financial ecosystem.
Executive Summary
1. This Is Live Financial Fraud, Not Passive Credential Theft.
Business perspective: agenteV2 establishes a persistent WebSocket backdoor with live screen streaming and a remote shell. The attacker watches the victim’s screen in real time and acts manually the moment a banking session opens. Financial losses can occur within minutes of infection, before any traditional alert fires.
Deploy ANY.RUN Interactive Sandbox to detonate suspicious email attachments in a live, controlled environment before they reach employee inboxes.
2. The Lure Is Convincing Enough to Fool Security-Aware Staff.
Business perspective: The phishing email impersonates a Brazilian federal court using a case number format indistinguishable from authentic CNJ court references. Even employees trained to spot phishing are likely to treat a realistic judicial summons as a high-priority communication requiring immediate action.
Use ANY.RUN Threat Intelligence Lookup to check suspicious email sender domains, embedded URLs, and attachment hashes instantly against a continuously updated threat intelligence database. A 10-second lookup is sufficient to surface this campaign’s known indicators.
3. The Malware Survives Reboots, IT Maintenance, and Password Resets.
Business perspective: Three separate persistence mechanisms — two Scheduled Tasks at maximum privilege and a Registry Run key — ensure the malware remains operational across reboots, routine IT maintenance, and even password changes.
ANY.RUN Threat Intelligence Feeds deliver structured IOCs directly into your SIEM and EDR for automated hunting across your entire endpoint fleet. Any host matching these indicators should be treated as actively compromised and isolated immediately.
4. Blocking the Known C2 IP Is Not Enough.
Business perspective: The malware reads its command-and-control server address from a public Pastebin page. The attacker can silently rotate to a new IP by editing a single page — without redeploying, recompiling, or redelivering any malware. IP blocklists become stale within hours of a C2 rotation.
Replace IP-based blocking with behavior-based detection. The agenteV2 TLS client fingerprint (JA3 hash)) is stable across infrastructure rotations and can be deployed as a detection rule in your IDS/NDR/EDR.
5. Traditional AV Will Not Catch This: Behavioral Analysis Is Required.
Business perspective: The core stealer DLL is compiled from Python to native machine code with Nuitka — no bytecode is extractable and standard decompilers do not apply. Files are disguised with legitimate names (wifi_driver.exe, msedge04.exe) and the payload executes entirely in memory before touching disk.
Behavioral sandbox analysis is the only reliable pre-execution detection method for Nuitka-compiled threats. The YARA rule in this report (Win_Stealer_AgenteV2_Nuitka) is deployable via ANY.RUN TI infrastructure for automated variant detection.
Impact Area
Assessment
Financial Impact
Real-time operator-assisted fraud + credential theft targeting major Brazilian banks and crypto wallets
Scope
Brazilian users judicial lure suggests broad targeting, not spearphishing
Persistence
Triple persistence (Registry Run + two Scheduled Tasks /rl highest)
C2 Resilience
Pastebin dead-drop resolver enables rapid IP rotation without redeployment
This attack was fully analyzed in ANY.RUN’s Interactive Sandbox, which provided full visibility into the multi-stage infection chain, process trees, network connections, API traces, and registry modifications in a live, controllable Windows 11 environment.
The threat actor operates a well-structured infrastructure spanning phishing delivery, staged payload distribution, a Pastebin-based dead-drop resolver, and a dedicated C2 server hosted on a bulletproof VPS provider in Germany.
The final payload, internally named agenteV2, is a Python-based interactive Banking Trojan and Information Stealer whose core logic (agenteV2_historico_detect.dll) is compiled with Nuitka into native machine code.
Close blind spots and reduce breach risks in your company.
Integrate ANY.RUN’s sandbox for early threat detection.
It is not a passive fire-and-forget stealer — it establishes a persistent WebSocket backdoor (uws://) enabling live screen streaming (PIL + mss), an interactive remote shell (subprocess.Popen dispatched via CMD:SHELL: parsing), and real-time operator control over the victim session. Persistence is achieved via Registry Run key and Scheduled Tasks (/rl highest), and a Pastebin dead-drop resolver enables rapid C2 rotation without redeployment.
1. Initial Artifact Analysis
1.1 Email lure (.eml)
The campaign is delivered via email impersonating an official judicial summons from the Tribunal de Justiça do Distrito Federal (TJDF), referencing a fabricated civil conciliation hearing (case number 2194839-33.2026.8.07.1876). The case number format matches the authentic Brazilian CNJ numbering standard, increasing credibility.
Phishing email: PDF with password prompt and fake error message with download link for VBS
Property
Value
Filename
INTIMACAO JUDICIAL – Designacao de Conciliacao – Diegovolt – 2194839-33.2026.8.07.1876.eml
MIME Type
message/rfc822 (SMTP mail, ASCII text, CRLF line terminators)
The PDF attachment requires a password to open a technique to bypass email gateway sandboxes that cannot interact with password-protected documents. Upon ‘failing’ to open, the PDF instructs the victim to download a VBS file via a ‘click here’ link, attributing the error to a missing software component. This two-step friction is deliberate: it filters unengaged recipients and increases commitment of those who proceed.
2. Infection Chain
The full process tree and infection chain graph are visible in the sandbox detonation: WScript.exe → cmd.exe → schtasks + wifi_driver.exe execution flow:
Malware process tree in the sandbox analysis
The processes include malware delivery, payload delivery, persistence establishment, and more:
Phase
Description
Delivery
Phishing email with judicial lure. Password-protected PDF attachment. Victim instructed to download VBS via embedded link.
Initial Execution
Victim manually executes 0124_INTMACAO_.vbs from Downloads folder. WScript.exe invoked.
Gate Contact
VBS contacts odaracani.online/index.php?id=3df947b3 (unique victim ID). GET returns 200; POST triggers 302 redirect.
Payload Landing
Redirected to nuevaprodeciencia.club/br77b/ redirect chain via cert.php → cord.php → download.php → arquivos/download.php?id_*.
Payload Download
VBS uses MSXML2.ServerXMLHTTP.6.0 + ADODB.Stream to download reiniciar.exe (~6.4 MB) and wifi_driver.exe (~12.6 MB, served as msedge04.exe).
Installation
Payloads written to C:Program Files (x86)Wi-fi masquerading as Wi-Fi driver components.
Persistence
Two Scheduled Tasks created via cmd.exe: RunAsAdmin_AutoUpdate and RunAsAdmin_Executar both /sc onlogon /rl highest.
UAC Bypass
VBS re-executes with arguments /elevated /fromtask to gain elevated privileges without a UAC prompt.
Initial Beacon
VBS calls IWshShell3.Run() on nuevaprodeciencia.club/br77b/iayjaskyeiagds.php first checkin triggered directly from loader.
C2 Resolution
wifi_driver.exe (container) loads agenteV2_historico_detect.dll, which reads Pastebin dead-drop (pastebin.com/raw/0RmxqY57) to resolve real C2: 38.242.246.176:8443.
C2 Beaconing
agenteV2 beacons to C2 every ~60 seconds over TLS/8443. 524 bytes sent / ~1 KB received per cycle. Stealer module active.
3. Stage 1 VBScript Loader (0124_INTMACAO_.vbs)
3.1. Runtime Behavior (API Trace)
The following sequence was reconstructed from the ANY.RUN script API trace, showing the exact execution order of COM object calls:
ANY.RUN VBScript API call trace
Phase 1 reiniciar.exe download and persistence (~13 seconds post-execution):
wifi_driver.exe is executed twice before Sleep(3000) retry mechanism to ensure process startup;
The server-side filename is msedge04.exe; it is saved locally as wifi_driver.exe deliberate renaming at download time;
The initial C2 beacon is fired by the VBS loader itself via IWshShell3.Run, before the payload’s own beaconing loop begins.
3.2. Obfuscation & Payload Decoding Mechanism
The VBS loader implements a multi-layer obfuscation pipeline that decodes and executes a secondary payload entirely in memory. Despite its apparent complexity, the mechanism is fully deterministic and reversible — all decoding logic, keys, and transformations are self-contained in the script, with no external dependencies or dynamic key generation.
The two on-disk forms confirm runtime deobfuscation:
The ~8.4x expansion factor is explained by the encoding pipeline described below.
The encoded payload is stored as a large string built via repeated concatenation:
tEXXKcvxSM = tEXXKcvxSM & "<chunk>"
This pattern avoids signature-based detection of long static strings, prevents straightforward extraction, and obscures the actual payload size. It is a common technique in commodity VBS loaders.
Encoded VBScript Snippet
Three transformation functions are applied in sequence before the payload is executed:
Function
Technique
Security Value
AqBVqmjYfY (x3)
Triple Base64 decode via MSXML2.DOMDocument (bin.base64)
Low — trivially reversible
YnrbBGjUXH
Hexadecimal decode — Chr(CInt(“&H” & Mid(h, i, 2)))
Step 1 — Triple Base64 Decoding. The function AqBVqmjYfY wraps the MSXML2.DOMDocument COM object to perform Base64 decoding. It is called three consecutive times, nesting the calls:
b = AqBVqmjYfY(AqBVqmjYfY(AqBVqmjYfY(b)))
Triple-encoding increases entropy and defeats naive single-pass decoders, but provides no cryptographic security — each layer is independently and trivially reversible.
Step 2 — Hexadecimal Decoding. The function YnrbBGjUXH converts the Base64-decoded output from a hex-encoded byte stream into raw bytes:
Chr(CInt("&H" & Mid(h, i, 2)))
This confirms the intermediate payload is stored as a hex string, adding one further layer of visual obfuscation over the Base64 output.
Step 3 — Custom Byte Transformation (Pseudo-Encryption). The function obmFYHGTeJ is the core obfuscation layer. It applies a Vigenere-like modular subtraction cipher using a hardcoded array of multiple keys:
keys = Array("xsTqWN3wxwsA", "Bydpez94dTlZ", ...)
For each byte, the routine iterates through all keys in reverse order and applies:
ch = (ch - keyByte + 256) Mod 256
This is similar to a repeated-key XOR/Vigenere cipher. It is not cryptographically secure — the keys are hardcoded in the script, the transformation is deterministic, and the decoding pipeline is fully reproducible offline. The critical weakness is that all key material is embedded in the script itself.
After the three-stage decoding, the final payload is executed directly in memory without writing any intermediate artifact to disk:
Execute obmFYHGTeJ(tEXXKcvxSM)
This fileless execution pattern means the next stage never touches the filesystem in decoded form, evading file-based AV scanning. The decoded payload can be recovered by inserting a logging hook at the Execute call or by running the decoding pipeline offline with the extracted keys.
Obfuscation Technique
Effectiveness
Notes
Triple Base64
Low
Three independent reversible layers — no key material required
Hex encoding
Low
Simple Chr/Mid conversion — standard textbook technique
Custom byte transform
Low-Medium
Vigenere-like cipher with good structural complexity
Hardcoded key array
Critical weakness
All keys embedded in script — full offline decryption possible
String concatenation
Low
Defeats naive string grep but not dynamic analysis
In-memory execution
Medium
Evades file-based AV; recoverable via memory dump or hook
Overall assessment: the obfuscation chain is consistent with the use of publicly available VBS templates or tutorials. The layered approach demonstrates awareness of basic detection mechanisms but no understanding of cryptographic security. The presence of hardcoded keys and deterministic transformations makes full offline payload recovery straightforward for any analyst with access to the script.
4. Stage 2 Payload Architecture
The payload follows a two-component architecture: a lightweight container executable (wifi_driver.exe) and the actual malicious module (agenteV2_historico_detect.dll). These roles must not be confused only the DLL contains malicious logic.
Component
File
Size
Role
Container / Bootloader
wifi_driver.exe
~12.6 MB
Onefile bundle extracts Python runtime + DLL, then loads and executes the stealer DLL
wifi_driver.exe is a self-contained onefile bundle (PyInstaller or Nuitka container mode). It contains no malicious logic of its own. Its sole purpose is to:
Extract the full Python 3.13 runtime environment to a temporary directory (Temponefile_<PID>_<timestamp>);
Extract all required .pyd extensions and native DLLs alongside the runtime;
Load and execute agenteV2_historico_detect.dll the actual payload;
wifi_driver.exe is a self-contained onefile bundle (PyInstaller or Nuitka container mode). It contains no malicious logic of its own. Its sole purpose is to:
Extract the full Python 3.13 runtime environment to a temporary directory (Temponefile_<PID>_<timestamp>);
Extract all required .pyd extensions and native DLLs alongside the runtime;
Load and execute agenteV2_historico_detect.dll the actual payload;
Clean up the extraction directory on exit.
Reverse engineering path for wifi_driver.exe:
If PyInstaller: use pyinstxtractor.py to unpack the bundle → locate main.pyc (or file named after the executable) → decompile with pycdc to recover readable Python source;
If Nuitka container mode: the bootstrap code is minimal C focus effort on the extracted DLL, not the container;
The container itself is not the analytical target it is merely the delivery mechanism for the DLL.
Extracted runtime components dropped to Temponefile_<PID> by wifi_driver.exe:
File
Size
Purpose
python313.dll
6 MB
Python 3.13 interpreter main runtime
python3.dll
72 KB
Python stable ABI shim
vcruntime140.dll
118 KB
MSVC runtime (C++ support)
libcrypto-3.dll
5 MB
OpenSSL crypto TLS for C2 comms
libssl-3.dll
776 KB
OpenSSL TLS encrypted C2 channel
sqlite3.dll
2 MB
SQLite engine reading browser credential DBs
_sqlite3.pyd
128 KB
Python SQLite bindings
PIL/_imaging.pyd
2 MB
Pillow core screen capture
PIL/_imagingcms.pyd
264 KB
Pillow CMS image processing
psutil/_psutil_windows.pyd
69 KB
Process enumeration kill browsers before DB access, anti-VM checks
_wmi.pyd
39 KB
WMI bindings system fingerprinting (UUID, hostname, OS version)
_ssl.pyd
178 KB
Python SSL bindings HTTPS for C2/Pastebin
certifi/cacert.pem
266 KB
Trusted CA bundle validates Pastebin and C2 TLS certs
charset_normalizer/*.pyd
22 KB
Text encoding detection handles multi-encoding victim data
agenteV2_historico_detect.dll confirming Nuitka compilation, native PE DLL, no extractable bytecode
This DLL is the analytical target it contains all malicious logic. The original Python source was compiled with Nuitka (Python → C++ → native machine code), producing a monolithic 27 MB PE DLL with no extractable bytecode. pyinstxtractor and uncompyle6 do not apply here.
None not extractable; full native RE required (IDA Pro / Ghidra)
RE Difficulty
High ~90% of code is Nuitka boilerplate + CPython internals; malicious logic is a small fraction
Classification
Interactive Banking Trojan + Information Stealer not a passive exfiltrator
Name (internal)
agenteV2 ‘V2’ implies prior version in circulation; active development confirmed
OpSec quality
Poor verbose debug strings, original variable/function names, and cleartext URLs left intact
Despite robust Nuitka compilation, the threat actor failed to strip debug symbols, variable names, and cleartext strings from the binary exposing the full execution flow via static .rdata analysis. This is a recurring pattern in Brazilian malware: technically capable packaging decisions paired with poor operational security discipline.
Core Capabilities (Reconstructed from Static + Dynamic Analysis):
The malware does not hardcode the C2 address. It queries a Pastebin URL to dynamically retrieve the active C2 IP and port, enabling infrastructure rotation without redeployment:
Unlike typical stealers that perform a single HTTP POST exfiltration and terminate, agenteV2 establishes a persistent WebSocket connection (uws:// scheme) to the C2. This architecture enables real-time, bidirectional communication making it function as a full interactive backdoor rather than a passive stealer:
Continuous screen capture stream using PIL (Pillow) and mss libraries frames encoded as JPEG and streamed live to the operator;
Interactive remote shell via CMD:SHELL: command prefix commands dispatched through subprocess.Popen, output returned over the WebSocket;
Real-time telemetry: live operator visibility into the victim’s desktop session.
This design is optimized for manual, real-time financial fraud. The operator can watch the victim’s screen, interact with open banking sessions, and issue commands on the fly.
IDA Pro / strings uws:// WebSocket scheme string, CMD:SHELL: command prefix, subprocess.Popen references in .rdata
4.2. Evasive Browser Credential Harvesting
The stealer targets all Chromium-based browsers (Chrome, Edge, Brave, Opera) across all user profiles. To bypass the SQLite file lock maintained by running browsers, it uses shutil.copyfile to duplicate the target database files into %TEMP% before executing SQL SELECT queries:
Target files: Login Data, Cookies, History
Method: shutil.copyfile(src, %TEMP%<random>) → sqlite3.connect(copy) → SELECT * FROM logins
String (.rdata)
Address
Capability
Varre todos os perfis de navegadores e busca Inter/Stone no disco
0x18129845A
Scans all browser profiles for Inter and Stone bank data
clonando o banco para ler mesmo se aberto
0x181298976D
Explicit DB cloning to bypass file lock while browser is running
4.3. Security Controls & Anti-Fraud Enumeration
The malware proactively profiles the host for regional anti-fraud and endpoint protection solutions before proceeding with credential theft a strong indicator of deliberate LATAM targeting:
Diebold Warsaw (Warsaw Security Module) disk path queries for this widely-deployed Brazilian banking security plugin;
GbPlugin disk path queries for this browser security plugin used by major Brazilian banks.
Detection of these solutions likely influences the malware’s behavior (evasion, delayed execution, or alternate attack paths).
Diebold Warsaw and GbPlugin path references used for security controls enumeration
4.4. Analyst Assessment
agenteV2 is not a passive, fire-and-forget stealer. It is a purpose-built interactive agent designed for real-time manual financial fraud in the Brazilian market. The WebSocket architecture, live screen streaming, and remote shell capability are consistent with an operator-assisted attack flow: the threat actor watches the victim’s screen in real time, waits for a banking session to open, and interacts directly.
The Nuitka compilation demonstrates meaningful anti-analysis effort; however, the failure to strip debug strings, variable names, and cleartext URLs reveals the full implementation to any analyst with access to the binary a significant OpSec failure that partially undermines the obfuscation investment.
4.5. Persistence Mechanisms
The payload establishes a third persistence layer independently of the VBS loader:
Note: the Registry Run value points to a .py file in %TEMP% this assumes either Python is installed and registered as a handler for .py files on the victim machine, or represents an implementation error by the threat actor (a common characteristic of amateur-but-functional malware). The name ‘MonitorSystem’ is social engineering for any victim who opens regedit.
ANY.RUN Registry modification event: HKCURunMonitorSystem key creation by wifi_driver.exe process
5. Stage 3 C2 Communication
5.1. Dead-Drop Resolver via Pastebin
agenteV2 does not hardcode the C2 IP. Instead, it implements a Pastebin-based dead-drop resolver allowing the threat actor to rotate C2 infrastructure without recompiling or redelivering the malware:
Browser pastebin.com/raw/0RmxqY57 raw content showing plaintext C2 address: 38.242.246.176 8443
The resolver (documented in DLL strings as ‘Busca IP e Porta Base do Pastebin. Retorna (ip, port) ou None’) parses the Pastebin content to extract the IP and port as a tuple, with explicit error handling for fetch failures and malformed content.
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 (Cloudflare/Pastebin proxy not C2 fingerprint)
The JA3 hash (a48c0d5f95b1ef98f560f324fd275da1) can be used as a network detection rule it will match agenteV2’s TLS ClientHello regardless of C2 IP rotation.
6. Threat Actor Infrastructure
Shodan 38.242.246.176: Hestia Control Panel on port 8083, open ports list, hostname vmi3003111.contaboserver.net, nginx banner
6.1. Infrastructure Map
Role
Asset
Details
Phishing Gate / Tracker
odaracani[.]online
Per-victim unique ID tracking (?id=3df947b3). POST → 302 redirect to payload server. IP: 69.49.241.120
25, 465, 587 strongly suggests phishing emails dispatched from this same VPS
The Hestia Control Panel on port 8083 indicates the threat actor self-manages this server rather than using a hosting reseller. The presence of active SMTP ports alongside the C2 port strongly suggests this VPS serves as an all-in-one campaign platform: phishing email dispatch, payload hosting management, and C2 handling.
Threat Actor Assessment
Campaign Characteristics
Exclusively targeting Brazilian users Portuguese lure, CNJ court number format, Brazilian bank/fintech targeting, and enumeration of LATAM-specific anti-fraud tools (Diebold Warsaw, GbPlugin);
Judicial summons lure is a well-established social engineering technique in Brazil exploits fear of legal consequences to reduce victim scrutiny;
Per-victim unique tracking ID (?id=3df947b3) demonstrates the actor actively monitors individual infection progress;
WebSocket persistent backdoor with live screen streaming points to operator-assisted, manual fraud the threat actor watches victims’ screens in real time and waits for banking sessions to open;
Cloudflare Turnstile CAPTCHA on payload server deliberate anti-sandbox and anti-researcher measure;
Multi-step redirect chain before payload delivery adds anti-scraping friction;
‘agenteV2’ naming implies active development a prior version (v1) likely exists or circulated previously;
Nuitka compilation of the core DLL represents a meaningful step above typical Brazilian stealer tradecraft; however, the failure to strip debug strings, variable names, and cleartext URLs is a significant OpSec failure that partially negates the obfuscation investment.
Infrastructure Assessment
Two-tier delivery infrastructure (69[.]49.241[.]120 for phishing/payload, 38[.]242.246[.]176 for C2) separation reduces single-point takedown impact;
Pastebin dead-drop resolver is the primary C2 resilience mechanism actor can rotate C2 IPs by editing a single Pastebin page without touching deployed malware;
Active SMTP ports on C2 VPS strongly suggest self-hosted phishing email dispatch from the same server;
Hestia Control Panel indicates actor self-manages the VPS not a reseller customer;
Contabo GmbH (AS51167) is a known bulletproof-tolerant provider frequently abused by threat actors for affordable pricing and slow abuse response;
Implementation inconsistency (Registry Run value pointing to .py file) suggests the actor has strong Python development skills but limited operational security maturity.
Detection & Response Recommendations
1. Immediate Blocking
Block domains odaracani[.]online and nuevaprodeciencia[.]club at DNS/proxy/firewall;
Block IPs 69[.]49.241[.]120 and 38[.]242.246[.]176 at perimeter;
Add JA3 hash a48c0d5f95b1ef98f560f324fd275da1 as a network detection rule (IDS/NDR/EDR);
Block or alert on access to pastebin[.]com/raw/0RmxqY57 and request takedown of the page;
Deploy Suricata SIDs listed in section 6.6.
2. SIEM Detection Rules
Alert: WScript.exe spawning cmd.exe with ‘schtasks’ + ‘/rl highest’ in command line;
Alert: Any process writing PE files to C:Program Files (x86)Wi-fi;
Alert: Scheduled Task creation with /rl highest by non-SYSTEM processes (Event ID 4698);
Alert: HKCURun key creation by non-installer processes;
Alert: ADODB.Stream + MSXML2.ServerXMLHTTP instantiated in the same WScript.exe process;
Alert: Outbound TLS connections to port 8443 from non-browser processes.
Isolate affected host from network immediately upon detection;
Collect full memory dump of wifi_driver.exe and reiniciar.exe processes before terminating;
Hash all files in C:Program Files (x86)Wi-fi and compare against IOCs in section 6.1;
Assume all browser-saved credentials are compromised reset all banking, email, and crypto account passwords;
Review outbound TLS/8443 traffic in network logs for the past 30 days to assess exfiltration window;
Check browser extension integrity stealer may have modified or added extensions.
5. Threat Intelligence: TI Feeds & TI Lookup
Proactive intelligence on this campaign and similar threats can be operationalized using ANY.RUN’s Threat Intelligence suite:
ANY.RUN TI Lookup: Query all IOCs from this report (domains, IPs, file hashes, JA3 fingerprints) directly in TI Lookup to retrieve correlated sandbox verdicts, associated samples, C2 infrastructure mappings, and MITRE ATT&CK tagging across the ANY.RUN corpus. TI Lookup returns structured, analyst-ready context including first-seen/last-seen timestamps, related tasks, and artifact relationships — dramatically accelerating triage.
ANY.RUN TI Feeds: Subscribe to structured IOC feeds to push indicators from this campaign — and the broader Brazilian banking stealer ecosystem — directly into your SIEM, SOAR, EDR, or firewall. Feeds are updated continuously as new samples are analyzed in the sandbox, providing near-real-time coverage of emerging infrastructure and payload variants.
YARA Rules in TI Feeds: The Win_Stealer_AgenteV2_Nuitka YARA rule (section 9.3) can be deployed via ANY.RUN’s TI infrastructure to automatically flag new samples matching the Nuitka agenteV2 pattern as they surface in the wild.
Proactive Monitoring: Use TI Lookup to monitor the Pastebin dead-drop URL (pastebin.com/raw/0RmxqY57) and C2 IP (38.242.246.176) for updates — if the threat actor rotates infrastructure, ANY.RUN’s correlated sandbox data will surface the new indicators before they reach victim endpoints.
The Business Case for ANY.RUN Enterprise
Security decision-makers evaluating their defensive posture against threats like agenteV2 face three compounding problems: the attack surface is broad (any employee in Brazil is a potential victim), the time-to-fraud is measured in minutes (not days), and the attacker’s tooling actively resists the tools most organizations currently deploy. The question is not whether a more capable threat intelligence and analysis platform is needed. It is whether the cost of that platform is lower than the cost of a single successful fraud event.
Based on the capabilities demonstrated in this campaign, the answer is unambiguous. A single successful agenteV2 infection gives an attacker live visibility into an employee’s banking session, the ability to issue commands through a remote shell, and persistence that survives the endpoint until it is explicitly cleaned. The financial exposure from a single operator-assisted fraud event, combined with the credential exfiltration across all browser profiles, will in most cases far exceed the annual cost of enterprise-grade behavioral analysis and threat intelligence.
ANY.RUN Enterprise Suit addresses each failure mode this campaign is designed to exploit:
Before infection: Interactive Sandbox detonates suspicious email attachments, including password-protected PDFs, with analyst interaction in a fully instrumented Windows environment. The complete 11-stage attack chain surfaces in minutes, before any production endpoint is touched.
During triage: TI Lookup delivers instant, correlated intelligence on every IOC in this report (domains, IPs, file hashes, JA3 fingerprints) with MITRE ATT&CK mapping, first/last seen timestamps, and linked sandbox analyses. Triage that takes an analyst hours without context takes seconds with TI Lookup.
At scale and speed: TI Feeds push structured, continuously updated IOC streams directly into your SIEM, SOAR, EDR, and firewall, converting sandbox findings into blocking and detection rules automatically, across your entire environment, without analyst intervention per indicator.
Against evasion: Behavioral analysis in ANY.RUN’s sandbox is not defeated by Nuitka compilation, in-memory execution, or filename masquerading. It observes what the malware does, not what it looks like, making it structurally resistant to the obfuscation techniques this campaign relies on.
Against infrastructure rotation: The JA3 TLS fingerprint and behavioral YARA rule in this report remain valid even after the threat actor rotates their C2 IP. ANY.RUN’s TI infrastructure ensures these durable detection signals are operationalized immediately, not after the next campaign wave.
The agenteV2 operators have invested meaningfully in their tooling. The organizations they target deserve to match that investment — with a platform built for the reality of modern, operator-assisted financial fraud rather than the commodity threats of five years ago.
Conclusion
This campaign is a vivid reminder that phishing has outgrown its old role as a simple delivery mechanism. It now acts as a gateway to interactive, real-time financial compromise, where attackers don’t just steal data, they participate in the victim’s actions like an invisible co-pilot with bad intentions.
For businesses, the risk is no longer limited to credential leakage. When malware enables live screen monitoring, remote command execution, and direct interaction with financial sessions, the impact shifts to immediate financial loss, operational disruption, and reputational damage. Finance teams, executives, and any employees handling sensitive transactions become prime targets.
Defending against this class of threats requires more than static detection. Organizations need visibility into behavior, speed in investigation, and context for decision-making.
This is where a combined approach becomes critical:
Interactive Sandbox analysis helps teams understand exactly how a threat behaves before it spreads.
TI Lookup provides instant context, turning isolated indicators into actionable insight.
Together, these capabilities transform security from reactive firefighting into controlled, informed response.
In a landscape where attackers operate in real time, businesses must do the same.
About ANY.RUN
ANY.RUN, a leading provider of interactive malware analysis and threat intelligence solutions, helps security teams investigate threats faster and with greater clarity across modern enterprise environments.
It allows teams to safely execute suspicious files and URLs, observe real behavior in an Interactive Sandbox, enrich indicators with immediate context through TI Lookup, and monitor emerging malicious infrastructure using Threat Intelligence Feeds. Together, these capabilities help reduce investigation uncertainty, accelerate triage, and limit unnecessary escalations across the SOC.
ANY.RUN is trusted by thousands of organizations worldwide and meets enterprise security and compliance expectations. It is SOC 2 Type II certified, demonstrating its commitment to protecting customer data and maintaining strong security controls.
SQLite DB cloning of Chrome/Edge Login Data + Cookies all browser profiles
T1113
Screen Capture
Collection
—
PIL + mss libraries continuous JPEG frame streaming over WebSocket to operator
T1059.001
Command & Scripting: PowerShell/Shell
Execution
.001
Remote shell via CMD:SHELL: prefix parsed from WebSocket dispatched through subprocess.Popen
T1571
Non-Standard Port
C2
—
WebSocket C2 (uws://) over port 8443 non-standard port for WebSocket traffic
T1012
Query Registry
Discovery
—
84,457 registry reads observed in sandbox
T1082
System Information Discovery
Discovery
—
psutil + WMI: hostname, UUID, OS version, process list
T1083
File and Directory Discovery
Discovery
—
Scans all browser profiles across all user directories
T1057
Process Discovery
Discovery
—
psutil enumerates running processes terminates browsers before DB file access
T1518.001
Security Software Discovery
Discovery
.001
Queries disk paths for Diebold Warsaw and GbPlugin anti-fraud solutions
T1102.001
Web Service: Dead Drop Resolver
C2
.001
pastebin.com/raw/0RmxqY57 resolves to real C2 IP:port
T1071.001
App Layer Protocol: WebSocket
C2
.001
Persistent uws:// WebSocket connection to 38.242.246.176:8443 bidirectional real-time C2
FAQ
Who is targeted by this campaign?
This campaign targets Brazilian individuals and organizations — anyone who might receive what appears to be an official court summons. The lure is broad (civil conciliation hearing, not targeted spearphishing), meaning any employee in Brazil could be a victim.
My organization doesn’t do banking in Brazil. Should we still care?
Yes. The stealer harvests all browser-saved credentials — not just banking ones — across all Chromium-based browser profiles. Corporate credentials stored in browser password managers (email, SaaS platforms, VPNs, internal portals) are all at risk. Additionally, the malware installs a full remote shell, meaning a successful infection grants the attacker persistent, elevated access to the corporate endpoint regardless of banking activity.
How quickly can an attacker conduct financial fraud after initial infection?
Very quickly. The malware begins beaconing to C2 within approximately 30 seconds of the VBS file being executed. Once the operator’s WebSocket session is established, they can view the victim’s screen in real time. If a banking session is already open in the browser, fraud could occur within minutes. The operator is not automated — they are watching and waiting, which means they will time their intervention to maximize impact (e.g., during an active funds transfer).
We blocked the C2 IP (38.242.246.176). Are we protected?
Partially. Blocking the known C2 IP prevents beaconing to the current infrastructure, but the Pastebin dead-drop resolver means the attacker can rotate to a new IP simply by editing a public Pastebin page — without touching any already-deployed malware. Blocking the specific Pastebin URL (pastebin.com/raw/0RmxqY57) and monitoring for TLS connections to port 8443 from non-browser processes provides more durable protection. The JA3 fingerprint (a48c0d5f95b1ef98f560f324fd275da1) is particularly valuable as it will detect agenteV2’s TLS handshake regardless of IP rotation.
How can ANY.RUN help us detect, investigate, and respond to this threat?
ANY.RUN’s Interactive Sandbox was used to conduct the full dynamic analysis in this report — providing complete visibility into the infection chain, process trees, API traces, network connections, and registry modifications. For ongoing defense: TI Lookup lets analysts query all IOCs from this report for correlated intelligence; TI Feeds push live indicators into your SIEM/SOAR/EDR for automated blocking; and the YARA rule in section 9.3 can be deployed to automatically detect new agenteV2 variants. The Enterprise suite combines all these capabilities in a unified platform designed for security teams that need to investigate and respond at scale.
https://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.png00adminhttps://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.pngadmin2026-04-24 11:06:432026-04-24 11:06:43Inside agenteV2: How Brazilian Attackers Use Fake Court Summons to Steal Banking Credentials in Real Time
https://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.png00adminhttps://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.pngadmin2026-04-24 06:06:342026-04-24 06:06:34GopherWhisper: A burrow full of malware
Welcome to this week’s edition of the Threat Source newsletter.
If I haven’t said it in a newsletter before, I’ll say it now: If you want to be good at cybersecurity, be a forever student. Cultivating and feeding your desire to know how things work is one of the key ingredients to being a hacker. It’s not always about understanding the micro details, but the macro of how systems work. And not just computers or software or networking systems — those are ecosystems we’re usually quite familiar with — but what about economics? agriculture? material sciences? human behavior? music and art? Do any of those carry any value into this profession?
They damn sure do. Many, many times I have had to branch my technical research into domains that arbitrarily seem to provide no immediate value for technical problems. Learning how maritime insurance fraud works was interesting to me — and a short time later, led to cyber insurance and understanding how risk guides security investment in massive companies. Understanding international agriculture helped me research threat actor targeting and ransomware cartel victimology.
One of the topics I’ve been researching heavily lately is economics, specifically industrial organization. It’s a branch of economics that studies how companies structure production, how markets form around them, and how costs operate at scale. For me, the natural target of my curiosity was Ford Motor Company. Henry Ford didn’t invent the car or the assembly line, but he was darn sure able to build and scale car production in a way that set the standard for all others in that space to emulate. I’ve learned about fixed vs. variable costs, how artisans had their knowledge crystalized within the assembly line process, and how and how amortized costs drove down prices, allowing the Ford Model T to exceed 900,000 units annually by the early 1920s. By that time, more than half of the registered automobiles in the world were Fords. Not half of American cars, half of all cars on Earth.
So what? Well, what took Ford Motor Company 17 years to achieve in cost and ceiling reductions, the AI industry has done in 2.5 years. The rapid and massive influx of investments, fierce competition, and available compute has shown what industrial organization means in a world where AI now almost permeates everything we see and touch. What does this mean for AI replacing jobs? Are we the artisans who move to the frontier of security? What does this mean for enabling threat actors who can move up a step to threatening others with tools developed using an AI corpus already trained on security? There are lots of questions, and to be honest, the future isn’t clear here. One thing is for certain: We can look to the past to understand the future. Henry Ford said it best: “Progress happens when all the factors that make for it are ready, and then it is inevitable.”
As much as we tend to be myopic as security professionals and focus on our tradecraft, we are all part of a series of interconnected systems that lets humanity function. Learning those systems — their quirks, their limitations, and their vulnerabilities — makes you a better hacker. Stay curious, friends.
The one big thing
Cisco Talos Incident Response (Talos IR) is sharing Q1 2026 incident response trends. Phishing has officially reclaimed its crown as the top initial access vector. In a notable first, responders observed adversaries leveraging Softr, an AI-powered web development tool, to rapidly generate credential-harvesting pages. Meanwhile, actual ransomware deployments hit absolute zero this quarter thanks to swift mitigation by Talos IR, though pre-ransomware activity accounted for 18% of engagements this quarter.
Why do I care?
The barrier to entry for cybercriminals is plummeting, and they are increasingly using our own tools against us. The use of AI platforms to spin up phishing infrastructure means even unsophisticated actors can launch high-speed, code-free attacks. Furthermore, threat actors are abusing legitimate developer tools like TruffleHog and native cloud APIs to quietly hunt for exposed secrets, making detection incredibly difficult for defenders already struggling with logging gaps.
So now what?
It’s time to get back to basics and lock down your perimeter. Organizations must implement properly configured multi-factor authentication (MFA), specifically restricting self-service enrollment to stop attackers from registering new devices. Defenders also need to prioritize robust patch management and ensure centralized logging via a SIEM is in place so forensic evidence remains intact. Read the full blog for a deeper dive into this quarter’s trends and adversary tactics.
Top security headlines of the week
Third U.S.securityexpertadmitshelpingransomwaregang According to the Justice Department, Martino abused his role as a ransomware negotiator for five companies by providing the BlackCat/Alphv cybercrime group with information useful in negotiating a ransom payment. (SecurityWeek)
22BRIDGE:BREAKflaws expose thousands ofLantronixand Silex serial-to-IP converters Successful exploitation of the flaws could allow attackers to disrupt serial communications with field assets, conduct lateral movement, and tamper with sensor values or modify actuator behavior. (The Hacker News)
How hackers “trojan-horsed” QEMU virtual machines to bypass security and drop ransomware In recent incidents, attackers used QEMU, an open-source machine emulator and virtualizer, to run hidden environments where malicious activity remained largely invisible to endpoint defenses and left minimal evidence on the host system. (TechRadar)
Mastodon says its flagship server was hit by a DDoS attack The cyber attack targeting Mastodon comes days after Bluesky, another decentralized social network, resolved much of its days-long outagesfollowing a lengthy DDoS attack. (TechCrunch)
Exploits turn Windows Defender into attacker tool Threat actors are using three publicly available proof-of-concept exploits (two are unpatched) to attack Microsoft Defender and turn the security platform’s primary cleanup and protection functions against organizations it is designed to protect. (Dark Reading)
AI phishing, fake CAPTCHA, and real-world cyber threat trends The Talos team breaks down findings from Q1 2026 — including phishing returning as the top initial access vector, and how attackers are using AI tools to build credential harvesting campaigns in almost no time at all.
UAT-4356’s targeting of Cisco Firepower devices UAT-4356 exploited n-day vulnerabilities (CVE-2025-20333 and CVE-2025-20362) to gain unauthorized access to vulnerable devices, where the threat actor deployed their custom-built backdoor dubbed “FIRESTARTER.”
https://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.png00adminhttps://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.pngadmin2026-04-23 18:06:332026-04-23 18:06:33It pays to be a forever student
In many countries, spring is the traditional time for filing income tax returns. These documents are a goldmine for bad actors because they contain a wealth of personal data, such as employment history, income, assets, bank account details — the list goes on. It’s no surprise that scammers ramp up their efforts around this time; the internet is currently crawling with fake websites designed to look exactly like government resources and tax authorities.
With deadlines looming and numbers to crunch, the rush to get everything done in good time can cause people to let their guard down. In the shuffle, it’s easy to miss the signs that the site where you’re detailing your finances has zero connection to the revenue service, or that the file you just downloaded, supposedly from a tax inspector, is actually malware.
In this post, we break down how these fraudulent tax agency sites operate across different countries and what you should absolutely avoid doing to keep your money and sensitive information safe.
Taxpayer phishing
This season, attackers have been spoofing tax authority websites across numerous countries, including the official government portals of Germany, France, Austria, Switzerland, Brazil, Chile, and Colombia. On these fraudulent sites, scammers harvest credentials for legitimate services, and steal personal data before offering to process a tax deduction — provided the victim enters their credit card details. In some cases, they even charge a fee for this fraudulent service.
A site imitating the Chilean tax authority. The victim is prompted to enter their credit card information to receive a substantial tax refund — roughly US$375. Instead, the funds are siphoned from the victim’s account directly to the scammers
Sometimes, the tactic involves accusations issued on behalf of government bodies. In the image below, for example, a “head of tax audit” in Paris informs the victim that they provided incomplete income information. To avoid penalties, the user is told to download a document and make corrections immediately. However, the PDF file hides something much worse: malware.
Instead of an official document from the French tax service, the user finds malware waiting inside the PDF
In Colombia, a fake National Directorate of Taxes and Customs site similarly prompts users to download documents that must be “unlocked with a security key”. In reality, this is simply a password-protected, malicious ZIP archive.
After entering the password, the user opens a malicious archive that infects their device
Beyond phishing sites mimicking legitimate resources, our experts have discovered fraudulent websites promising paid services for filling out and auditing tax documents — and stealing high-value data, such as taxpayer identification numbers (TINs), instead.
Scammers in Brazil offer help with tax returns. To contact them, the user must provide their name, phone number, address, date of birth, email, and TIN in a special form. Handing over a TIN puts the victim at risk of fraudulent loan applications, hijacked government service accounts, and further social engineering attacks
Another Brazilian scam site. If you believe the attackers, they file 60 million tax returns annually — supposedly assisting a staggering 28% of the Brazilian population
Tax-free crypto earnings
Cryptocurrency holders have emerged as a specific target for attackers. Fake German tax authorities are demanding that wallet owners “verify their digital asset holdings”, citing EU regulations for tax calculation purposes. And of course, there’s a “silver lining”: it turns out crypto earnings are supposedly tax-exempt! However, to claim this generous benefit, users must go through a “verification” procedure. The site even promises to encrypt data using a “2048-bit SSL protocol”.
To complete the “verification” process, users are prompted to enter their seed phrase — the unique sequence of words tied to a crypto wallet that grants full recovery access. This request is paired with a threat: refusing to provide the data will lead to serious legal consequences, such as fines up to one million euros or criminal prosecution.
An announcement on the fake ELSTER portal claims that crypto earnings are tax-free following “verification” — and that the “tax service” has no direct access to users’ wallets. Should we believe it?
First, the user is prompted to enter their personal information…
…And then they choose how to verify their crypto holdings: by linking a crypto wallet or an exchange account. Among the services targeted by these scammers are Ledger, Trezor, Trust Wallet, BitBox02, KeepKey, MetaMask, Phantom, and Coinbase
Finally, the victim is asked to provide their seed phrase, giving scammers total control over the wallet. The attackers kindly warn the victim to make sure no one is looking at their screen while they threaten them with non-existent legal penalties for non-compliance
Attackers pulled a similar stunt on French users as well. They created a non-existent “Crypto Tax Compliance Portal”, which mimics the design of the French Ministry of Economy and Finance website. The phishing site aggressively demands that French residents submit a “digital asset declaration”.
After the user enters their personal information, the scammers prompt them to either manually enter their seed phrase, or “link” their crypto wallet to the portal. If they go through with this, their MetaMask, Binance, Coinbase, Trust Wallet, or WalletConnect wallets will be drained.
The phishing site aggressively demands that French residents provide a “digital asset declaration” (translation: they want to hijack your crypto accounts)
Once personal data is entered, scammers offer the choice of manually entering a seed phrase or “linking” a wallet to the portal
Can AI help with your tax returns?
When you have AI at your fingertips that can instantly generate text and fill out spreadsheets, there’s a serious temptation to delegate everything to it. Unfortunately, this can lead to serious consequences. First, all popular chatbots process your data on their servers, which puts your sensitive information at risk of a leak. Second, they sometimes make incredibly foolish mistakes, and that can lead to actual trouble with the taxman.
Before you tell a chatbot or an AI agent how much money you made last year — complete with detailed personal and banking info — remember how frequently leaks occur within AI-powered services and consider the risks. Don’t discuss your income with AI, don’t give it personal details like your name or address, and under no circumstances should you upload photos or numbers of vital documents such as passports, insurance info, or social security numbers. Files containing confidential information should be kept in encrypted containers, such as Kaspersky Password Manager.
If you’re still determined to use AI tools, run them locally. This can be done for free even on a standard laptop, and we’ve previously covered how to set up local language models using DeepSeek as an example. However, the quality of the output from these models is often subpar. It’s quite possible that double-checking every digit in an AI-generated response will take more time than just filling out the paperwork manually. Remember, you’re the one accountable to the tax office for any errors — not the AI.
Finally, watch out for phishing AI models that offer “assistance” with tax filing. Kaspersky experts have discovered websites where users are prompted to upload tax invoices, supposedly for the automated generation of returns and deduction claims. Instead, attackers collect this personal data to resell on the dark web, or to use in future phishing attacks, blackmail, and extortion schemes.
The creators of a fake AI tool prompt users to upload tax documents, and kindly assure them that the site doesn’t store any user data. In reality, every piece of information entered — name, address, documents, contact person, phone number — ends up in the hands of cybercriminals
Remember that all legitimate AI services explicitly warn users not to share confidential data, and tax documents certainly fall into this category. Any AI tools promising to help you handle your tax paperwork are quite simply a scam.
How to protect yourself and your data
File your taxes yourself. The risk of running into scammers is extremely high. Even if a consulting firm is legitimate, you’re inevitably handing over a complete dossier on yourself: passport details, employment and income info, your address, and more. Remember that even the most honest services aren’t immune to hacks and data breaches.
Watch out for fake websites. Use a reliable security solution that prevents you from visiting phishing sites and blocks malicious file downloads.
Keep all important documents encrypted. Storing photos, notes, or files on your desktop, or starred messages in a messaging app isn’t a secure way to handle sensitive data. A secure vault like Kaspersky Password Manager can store more than just passwords and credit card info; it can also safeguard documents and even photos.
Don’t trust AI. Even the most advanced chatbots are prone to errors and hallucinations, and in theory, developers can read any conversation you have with their AI. If you absolutely must use AI, install and run a local version on your own computer.
Stick to official channels only. The “chief tax inspector” of your country or city is definitely not going to message you: high-ranking officials have more important things to do. Only contact tax authorities through official channels, and carefully verify the sender of any emails you receive. Most often, even a slight deviation in the name or address is a telltale sign of a phishing campaign.
https://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.png00adminhttps://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.pngadmin2026-04-23 16:06:372026-04-23 16:06:37Spam and phishing targeting taxpayers | Kaspersky official blog
Cisco Talos is aware of UAT-4356‘s continued active targeting of Cisco Firepower devices’ Firepower eXtensible Operating System (FXOS). UAT-4356 exploited n-day vulnerabilities (CVE-2025-20333 and CVE-2025-20362) to gain unauthorized access to vulnerable devices, where the threat actor deployed their custom-built backdoor dubbed “FIRESTARTER.” FIRESTARTER considerably overlaps with the technical capabilities of RayInitiator’s Stage 3 shellcode that processes incoming XML-based payloads to endpoint APIs.
In early 2024, Cisco Talos attributed ArcaneDoor, a state-sponsored campaign focused on gaining access to network perimeter devices for espionage, to UAT-4356.
Customers are advised to refer to Cisco’s Security Advisory for mitigation and detection guidance, indicators of compromise (IOCs), affected products, and applicable software upgrade recommendations.
The FIRESTARTER backdoor
FIRESTARTER is a malicious backdoor implanted by UAT-4356 that allows remote access and control to execute arbitrary code inside the LINA process, a core component of Cisco’s ASA and FTD appliances running FXOS.
Persistence
UAT-4356 established persistence for FIRESTARTER on compromised devices by manipulating the mount list for Cisco Service Platform (CSP), namely “CSP_MOUNT_LIST”, to execute FIRESTARTER. The mount list allows programs and commands to be executed as part of the device’s boot sequence. The persistence mechanism triggers during graceful reboot (i.e., when a process termination signal is received). FIRESTARTER also checks the runlevel for value 6 (indicating device reboot) and in case of a match, writes itself to backup location “/opt/cisco/platform/logs/var/log/svc_samcore.log” and updates the CSP_MOUNT_LIST to copy itself back to “/usr/bin/lina_cs” and then be executed. When FIRESTARTER runs after a reboot, it restores the original CSP_MOUNT_LIST and removes the trojanized copy. Because the runlevel triggers establishment of this transient persistence mechanism, a hard reboot (for example, after the device has been unplugged from power) effectively removes the implant from the device.
FIRESTARTER has used the following commands to establish persistence for itself using the transient persistence mechanism:
When the implant injects itself into the LINA process, it removes the traces of its persistence mechanism by restoring the CSP_MOUNT_LIST from a temporary copy (“CSP_MOUNTLIST.tmp”), then removing the temporary copy and the FIRESTARTER file from disk (“/usr/bin/lina_cs”).
FIRESTARTER’s backdoor capabilities
FIRESTARTER can run arbitrary shellcode received by the device. A pre-defined handler function specified by a hardcoded offset in the LINA process’ memory is replaced by an unauthorized handler routine that parses the data being served to it. FIRESTARTER specifically looks for a WebVPN request XML. If the request data received matches a specific pattern of custom-defined prefixing then the shellcode that immediately follows it is executed in memory. If the prefixing bytes are not found, then the data is treated as regular request data and passed to the original handler function (if any).
FIRESTARTER’s loading mechanism, Stage 2 shellcode (i.e., the actual request handler component), handler function replacement, XML parsing for magic bytes, and final payload execution display considerable overlaps with RayInitiator’s Stage 3 deployment actions and accompanying artifacts.
Injecting and activating the malicious shellcode in LINA
FIRESTARTER first reads the LINA process’ memory to search for and verify the presence of the bytes (long) 0x1, 0x2, 0x3, 0x4, 0x5 at specific locations in memory. If found, FIRESTARTER will then query the process’ memory to find an “r-xp” memory range for the shared library “libstdc++.so”. It then copies the next stage shellcode (Stage 2) to the last 0x200 bytes of the memory region. FIRESTARTER then overwrites an internal data structure in the LINA process’ memory to replace a pointer to a WebVPN-specific, legitimate XML handler function with the address of the malicious Stage 2 shellcode.
The malicious shellcode is triggered as part of the authentication API’s request handling process and parses the incoming request data for magic markers signifying an executable payload. If found, the executable payload is then executed on the compromised device.
Detection guidance
The presence of the following artifacts – specifically the filenames “lina_cs” and “svc_samcore.log” – though somewhat brittle indicators, may indicate the presence of the FIRESTARTER on a Firepower device:
We recommend that Cisco customers follow the steps recommended in Cisco’s advisory, with particular attention to any applicable software upgrade recommendations. Organizations impacted can initiate a TAC request for Cisco support.
A FIRESTARTER infection may be mitigated on all affected devices by reimaging the devices.
On Cisco FTD software that is not in lockdown mode, there is also the option of killing the lina_cs process then reloading the device:
Lately, hackers have been turning up the heat on software developers. On the surface, this might seem like a puzzling move — why go after someone who’s literally paid to understand tech when there are plenty of less-savvy targets in the office? As it turns out, compromising a developer’s machine offers a much bigger payoff for an attacker.
Why developers are such high-value targets
For starters, compromising a coder’s workstation can give attackers a direct line to source code, credentials, authentication tokens, or even the entire development infrastructure. If the company builds software for others, a hijacked dev environment allows attackers to launch a massive supply chain attack, using the company’s products to infect its customer base. If the developer works on internal services, their machine becomes a perfect beachhead for lateral movement, allowing hackers to spread deeper into the corporate network.
Even when attackers are purely chasing cryptocurrency (and let’s face it, tech pros are much more likely to hold crypto than the average person), the malware used in these hits doesn’t just swap out wallet addresses; it vacuums up every scrap of valuable data it can find — especially those login credentials and session tokens. Even if the original attackers don’t care about corporate access, they can easily flip those credentials to initial access brokers or more specialized threat actors on the dark web.
Why developers are sitting ducks
In practice, developers aren’t nearly as good at understanding cyberthreats and spotting social engineering as they think they are. This misconception is a big reason why they often fall prey to cybercriminals. Professional expertise can often create a false sense of digital invincibility. This often leads technical professionals to cut corners on security protocols, bypass restrictions set by the security team, or even disable security software on their corporate machines when it gets in the way of their workflow. That mindset, combined with a job that requires them to constantly download and run third-party code, makes them sitting ducks for cyberattackers.
Attack vectors targeting developers
Once an attacker sets their sights on a software engineer, their go-to move is usually finding a way to slip malicious code onto the machine. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg — hackers are also masters at rebranding classic, battle-tested tactics.
Compromising open-source packages
One of the most common ways to hit a developer is by poisoning open-source software. We’ve seen a flood of these attacks over the past year. A prime example hit in March 2026, when attackers managed to inject malicious code into LiteLLM, a popular Python library hosted in the PyPI repository. Because this library acts as a versatile gateway for connecting various AI agents, it’s baked into a massive number of projects. These trojanized versions of LiteLLM delivered scripts designed to hunt for credentials across the victim’s system. Once stolen, that data serves as a skeleton key for attackers to infiltrate any company that was unlucky enough to download the infected packages.
Malware hidden in technical assignments
Every so often, attackers post enticing job openings for developers, complete with take-home test assignments that are laced with malicious code. For instance, in late February 2026, malicious actors pushed out web application projects built on Next.js via several malicious repositories, framing them as coding tests. Once a developer cloned the repo and fired up the project locally, a script would trigger automatically to download and install a backdoor. The attackers gained full remote access to the developer’s machine.
Fake development tools
Recently, our experts described an attack where hackers used paid search-engine ads to push malware disguised as popular AI tools. One of the primary baits was Claude Code, an AI coding assistant. This campaign specifically targeted developers looking for a way to use AI-assistants under the radar, without getting the green light from their company’s infosec team. The ads directed users to a malicious site that perfectly mimicked the official Claude Code documentation. It even included “installation instructions”, which prompted the user to copy and run a command. In reality, running that command installed an infostealer that harvested credentials and shuttled them off to a remote server.
Social engineering tactics
That said, attackers often stick to the basics when trying to plant malware. A recent investigation into a compromised npm package — Axios — revealed that hackers had gained access to a maintainer’s system using a shockingly simple “outdated software” ruse. The attackers reached out to the Axios repository maintainer while posing as the founder of a well-known company. After some back-and-forth, they invited him to a video interview. When the developer tried to join the meeting on what looked like Microsoft Teams, he hit a fake notification claiming his software was out of date and needed an immediate update. That “update” was actually a Remote Access Trojan, giving the attackers access to his machine.
Niche spam
Sometimes, even a blast of fake notifications does the trick, especially when it’s tailored to the audience. For example, just recently, attackers were caught posting fake alerts in the Discussions tabs of various GitHub projects, claiming there was a critical vulnerability in Visual Studio Code that required an immediate update. Because developers subscribed to those discussions received these alerts directly via email, the notifications looked like legitimate security warnings. Of course, the link in the message didn’t lead to an official patch; it pointed to a “fixed” version of VS Code that was actually laced with malware.
How to safeguard an organization
To minimize the risk of a breach, companies should lean into the following best practices:
Make security a native part of your workflow. Use specialized solutions to vet your images, packages, dependencies, and components.
https://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.png00adminhttps://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.pngadmin2026-04-22 18:06:352026-04-22 18:06:35Targeting developers: real-world cases, tactics, and defense strategies | Kaspersky official blog
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AI assistant interprets a lookup request in natural language, helps select sandbox analyses of malware using a TTP
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AI Search suggesting a lookup parameter
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What makes them particularly useful in operations:
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Final Thoughts
The gap between threat detection and effective response is not primarily a technology problem. It is a data problem. When analysts have access to rich, current, contextual intelligence at the moment they need it, decisions improve and outcomes follow.
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For teams that operationalize it, the cumulative effect is a SOC that is measurably faster, more accurate, and more confident — and an organization that is measurably harder to compromise and cheaper to defend.
About ANY.RUN
ANY.RUN, a leading provider of interactive malware analysis and threat intelligence solutions, helps security teams investigate threats faster and with greater clarity across modern enterprise environments.
It allows teams to safely execute suspicious files and URLs, observe real behavior in an Interactive Sandbox, enrich indicators with immediate context through TI Lookup, and monitor emerging malicious infrastructure using Threat Intelligence Feeds. Together, these capabilities help reduce investigation uncertainty, accelerate triage, and limit unnecessary escalations across the SOC.
ANY.RUN is trusted by thousands of organizations worldwide and meets enterprise security and compliance expectations. It is SOC 2 Type II certified, demonstrating its commitment to protecting customer data and maintaining strong security controls.
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https://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.png00adminhttps://www.backbox.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/website_backbox_text_black.pngadmin2026-04-22 14:07:262026-04-22 14:07:26More Attack Context for Faster Triage, Response, and Hunting. Now Available to Every SOC