August 23, 2018 By Shane Schick 2 min read

A new campaign involving the Ramnit botnet infected more than 100,000 computers over a two-month period and may foreshadow an even larger cybercriminal attack.

According to Check Point Research, threat actors launched a global series of attacks as part of an operation code-named “Black,” likely beginning in May.

Ramnit has been in operation since 2010 and is well-known as a banking Trojan. Its use in the Black operation includes creating a backdoor on infected machines and extracting information from them. Once installed, the malware offers an entry point for another botnet, Ngioweb, which can operate in both a regular back-connect proxy and relay proxy mode.

More Proxies, More Problems

While Ramnit may be essentially acting as a distribution mechanism for Ngioweb, the end result can be chains of proxy servers. This allows threat actors to make it more difficult for defenders to see what kind of services they’re running because they are hidden behind a bot’s IP address. The larger such a group of botnets becomes, the more readily it could be used for all kinds of nefarious purposes, according to the researchers.

By publishing the victim’s machine in a public channel like the Domain Name System (DNS), for instance, an attacker can then connect to a second infected machine via the relay proxy mode. The first infected machine becomes the relay between the second machine and the host by creating a new connection, and so on. The complexity of this approach not only keeps the attackers’ activities buried from view, but also allows it to quickly grow more powerful.

How to Defend Against Ramnit From the First Stage

Since Ramnit is considered the first-phase malware in the Black operation, security professionals should start there when it comes to prevention. Per IBM X-Force Incident Response and Intelligence Services’ (IRIS)’s cyberattack preparation framework, security teams should determine which users are most active on customer-facing webpages to establish a baseline of normal behavior, making it easier to spot abnormalities earlier on.

Chief information security officers (CISOs) and their teams should also be vigilant of attackers’ attempts to map webpage directories and suspicious user-agent strings to close off any input vulnerabilities. This way, the moment anyone lets Ramnit in, there might still be time to prevent Ngioweb from following close behind.

Source: Check Point Research

More from

When ransomware kills: Attacks on healthcare facilities

4 min read - As ransomware attacks continue to escalate, their toll is often measured in data loss and financial strain. But what about the loss of human life? Nowhere is the ransomware threat more acute than in the healthcare sector, where patients’ lives are literally on the line.Since 2015, there has been a staggering increase in ransomware attacks on healthcare facilities. And the impacts are severe: Diverted emergency services, delayed critical treatments and even fatalities. Meanwhile, the pledge some ransomware groups made during…

AI and cloud vulnerabilities aren’t the only threats facing CISOs today

6 min read - With cloud infrastructure and, more recently, artificial intelligence (AI) systems becoming prime targets for attackers, security leaders are laser-focused on defending these high-profile areas. They’re right to do so, too, as cyber criminals turn to new and emerging technologies to launch and scale ever more sophisticated attacks.However, this heightened attention to emerging threats makes it easy to overlook traditional attack vectors, such as human-driven social engineering and vulnerabilities in physical security.As adversaries exploit an ever-wider range of potential entry points…

4 trends in software supply chain security

4 min read - Some of the biggest and most infamous cyberattacks of the past decade were caused by a security breakdown in the software supply chain. SolarWinds was probably the most well-known, but it was not alone. Incidents against companies like Equifax and tools like MOVEit also wreaked havoc for organizations and customers whose sensitive information was compromised.Expect to see more software supply chain attacks moving forward. According to ReversingLabs' The State of Software Supply Chain Security 2024 study, attacks against the software…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today