April 17, 2017 By Larry Loeb 2 min read

At the end of 2016, many analysts believed the Locky and Cerber ransomware families would duke it out for control of the malware market in 2017. According to a recent Malwarebytes report, “Cybercrime Tactices and Techniques Q1 2017,” the Cerber family has resoundingly won.

The report revealed that, during its peak, Cerber’s market share domination approached that of TeslaCrypt during its most popular period of activity, which was the first half of 2016. Cerber kicked off 2017 with a huge 70 percent market share and approached 90 percent toward the end of the quarter.

Locky, on the other hand, faded to has-been status. It had just 2 percent market share by the end of March, according to data gathered by Malwarebytes-controlled honeypots.

One Step Ahead of Security

Cerber usually arrives via an email attachment. The attachment contains a link to a malicious self-extracting archive, which is stored in an attacker-controlled Dropbox account.

As a family, Cerber is optimized for criminal activity. New versions have appeared incrementally, featuring enhancements to evade security software — notably behavioral analysts and machine learning tools.

Trend Micro reported, for example, that recent iterations of Cerber include a new loading process that may cause problems for static machine learning approaches. These are the defense methods that analyze files without executing or emulating them. The ransomware can still be detected by a multilayer approach that does not rely on one technology, however.

Cerber Ransomware Demands Vigilance

According to Microsoft, Cerber accounted for more than one-quarter of all enterprise endpoint infections between Dec. 16, 2016 and Jan. 15, 2017. That’s not quite as high a surge as Malwarebytes detected, but it’s still the highest rate of infection during that period.

Cerber also uses its own ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) business model, which differs greatly from predecessors such as TeslaCrypt. The authors appear to be trying to make the malware as user-friendly as possible for the threat actors who distribute it.

Security professionals have come to accept constant mutation as a given with any ransomware. Cerber, however, demands a particularly high level of vigilance.

More from

Threat intelligence to protect vulnerable communities

2 min read - Key members of civil society—including journalists, political activists and human rights advocates—have long been in the cyber crosshairs of well-resourced nation-state threat actors but have scarce resources to protect themselves from cyber threats. On May 14, 2024, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) released a High-Risk Communities Protection (HRCP) report developed through the Joint Cyber Defense Collaborative that addresses the threat to these vulnerable groups, with findings contributed by the X-Force Threat Intelligence team.Cyber criminals seek stolen credentialsThe HRCP…

Overheard at RSA Conference 2024: Top trends cybersecurity experts are talking about

4 min read - At a brunch roundtable, one of the many informal events held during the RSA Conference 2024 (RSAC), the conversation turned to the most popular trends and themes at this year’s events. There was no disagreement in what people presenting sessions or companies on the Expo show floor were talking about: RSAC 2024 is all about artificial intelligence (or as one CISO said, “It’s not RSAC; it’s RSAI”). The chatter around AI shouldn’t have been a surprise to anyone who attended…

3 recommendations for adopting generative AI for cyber defense

3 min read - In the past eighteen months, generative AI (gen AI) has gone from being the source of jaw-dropping demos to a top strategic priority in nearly every industry. A majority of CEOs report feeling under pressure to invest in gen AI. Product teams are now scrambling to build gen AI into their solutions and services. The EU and US are beginning to put new regulatory frameworks in place to manage AI risks.Amid all this commotion, hackers and other cybercriminals are hardly…

Topic updates

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