Amazon

Thursday 19 February 2015

Maria Wilson securigroup Statement Credit Controller

Maria Wilson securigroup Statement 18 FEB 2015.xls  Credit Controller emails are being spammed out, with an attached excel document containing a macro.

These emails aren't from  securigroup at all, they are just being used to make the email look more genuine, ie. from a real company.
Note
It's also worth remembering that the company itself  may not have any knowledge of this email and it's link(s) or attachment as it won't have come from their servers and IT systems but from an external bot net.

It's not advised to ring them as there won't really be anything they can do to help you.
Message Header: (Note: reference is random)
From: Maria Wilson {maria.wilson08000@securigroup.co.uk}
Subject: Statement

Message Body

Please see attached up to date statement.

I would be grateful if you could confirm all due invoices have been processed for payment.

Many thanks
Maria

Maria Wilson | Credit Controller
T: 0141 285 3838



Think Sustainability - Do not print this email unless essential


This email and any attachments are confidential and intended for the addressee only.
If you are not the named recipient, you must not use, disclose, reproduce, copy or distribute the contents of this communication.
If you have received this in error, please contact the sender and then delete this email from your system.
Attachment:
Statement 18 FEB 2015.xls

Md5 Hashes:
307bb4b5c1ceedfe29a837524c2f8416 [1]
6cad1ce3e0dc8d39f38fbd8c2ba53914 [2]
944bf47ae650513abf5b75ccaece550e [3]

Malware Macro document information:

VirusTotal Report [1] (hits 0/57 Virus Scanners)

VirusTotal Report [2] (hits 0/57 Virus Scanners)

VirusTotal Report [3] (hits 0/57 Virus Scanners)

Malwr Report [1]
Malwr Report [2]
Malwr Report [3]

NOTE

The current round of Word and Excel attachments are targeted at Windows users.

Apple and Android software can open these attachments and may even manage to run the macro embedded inside the attachment.

The auto-download file is normally a windows executable and so will not currently run on  any operating system, apart from Windows.

However, if you are an Apple/Android user and forward the message to a Windows user, you will them put them at risk of opening the attachment and auto-downloading the malware.

Currently these attachments try to auto-download Dridex, which is designed to steal login information regarding your bank accounts (either by key logging, taking auto-screens hots or copying information from your clipboard (copy/paste))
Cheers,

Steve

2 comments:

chris said...

I lol’d when I saw the macro.

It goes to:

Dropper Host: hxxp://hazardcheck[.]de/js/bin.exe

And saves that file to:

%TEMP%\FfdgF.exe

All 3 variants seem to go to the same place

/chris

Anonymous said...

How to disinfect the computer if infected?