May 1, 2019 By David Bisson 2 min read

A distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) botnet targeting servers used by the Electrum bitcoin wallet reached 152,000 infected hosts at the end of April.

Malwarebytes began tracking this DDoS botnet and its attacks against Electrum’s infrastructure in the spring of 2019. On April 24, the number of infected machines serving the botnet numbered just below 100,000. The next day, its bot count reached 152,000. This total then fluctuated before settling back down to around 100,000 compromised machines.

According to Malwarebytes’ analysis, the majority of these infected computers are located in the Asia Pacific region. Meanwhile, most of the bots found in the Americas were located in Peru and Brazil.

Earlier in April, Malwarebytes observed attackers using two campaigns to drop ElectrumDoSMiner, the malware that is helping to fuel this botnet. One of those operations involved the RIG exploit kit, while the other used the Smoke Loader malware downloader. Even so, the security firm’s more recent report revealed that threat actors are also now using a previously undocumented loader called Trojan.BeamWinHTTP to help distribute ElectrumDoSMiner.

Putting the Electrum Attacks Into Context

This DDoS botnet is part of an ongoing assault against owners of Electrum bitcoin wallets. As reported by ZDNet, the siege began back in December 2018 when bad actors tricked users into installing a malicious wallet update by exploiting a flaw in Electrum’s software. Attackers then used this fake fix to steal more than 200 bitcoin from affected users in the matter of a week. In total, these actors have stolen the bitcoin equivalent of approximately $4.6 million as of Malwarebytes’ latest report.

In February, Electrum’s developers fought back by exploiting the same flaw to redirect users to install a patched version of the Electrum software. It was this move that likely prompted attackers to retaliate by launching the botnet and targeting Electrum’s servers, as Malwarebytes posited in its mid-April article. These DDoS attacks effectively overwhelmed Electrum’s legitimate nodes so that users had no choice but to connect to the malicious ones.

How to Defend Against a DDoS Botnet

Security professionals can help their organizations defend against a DDoS botnet by creating a secure perimeter around their cloud infrastructure. This perimeter should consist of next-generation firewalls, DDoS traffic scrubbing and anomaly detection. Security teams should also consider enlisting the help of artificial intelligence to improve their organization’s anti-malware defenses and their own effectiveness.

More from

The cybersecurity skills gap contributed to a $1.76 million increase in average breach costs

4 min read - Understaffing in cybersecurity — the "skills gap" — is driving up the cost of data breaches in recent years, according to a decade of reports by IBM.The 2024 IBM Data Breach Report found that more than half of breached organizations experienced severe security staffing shortages, a 26.2% increase from the previous year. They found this through a statistical analysis of the data gathered from in-depth interviews of more than 600 organizations that suffered data breaches in the prior year.The 2024…

Hive0147 serving juicy Picanha with a side of Mekotio

17 min read - IBM X-Force tracks multiple threat actors operating within the flourishing Latin American (LATAM) threat landscape. X-Force has observed Hive0147 to be one of the most active threat groups operating in the region, targeting employee inboxes at scale, with a primary focus on phishing and malware distribution. After a 3-month break, Hive0147 returned in July with even larger campaign volumes, and the debut of a new malicious downloader X-Force named "Picanha”, likely under continued development., deploying the Mekotio banking trojan. Hive0147…

Navigating the ethics of AI in cybersecurity

4 min read - Even if we’re not always consciously aware of it, artificial intelligence is now all around us. We’re already used to personalized recommendation systems in e-commerce, customer service chatbots powered by conversational AI and a whole lot more. In the realm of information security, we’ve already been relying on AI-powered spam filters for years to protect us from malicious emails.Those are all well-established use cases. However, since the meteoric rise of generative AI in the last few years, machines have become…

Topic updates

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