September 12, 2017 By Larry Loeb 2 min read

Threat actors targeting Brazilian users have hijacked Facebook’s content delivery network (CDN) as a vehicle for cybercrime. The actors are using the Facebook CDN as a way to deliver files that hide banking Trojans, according to MalwareHunter.

Cybercriminals use this method because most antivirus solutions will almost always trust such a specialized IP address. The threat actors take advantage of this assumption to slip their malware files past detection.

Similar Security Breaches Reported

Similar attacks have also been described by Palo Alto Networks in its blog, but these attacks use Dropbox and Google’s cloud storage services to store the same infected files. Like the Facebook CDN, neither cloud storage service is usually blocked by standard antivirus products. Again, assumptions made by the product creators proved fallacious in actual practice.

The current campaign specifically targets Brazilian users and starts with a mass email with an embedded link. The letter appears official in nature, and the link points to a RAR or a ZIP file hosted on the CDN. This file is an encoded PowerShell script, which will invoke the local PowerShell application.

Using a local application in this way is a malware trick to bypass some unsophisticated security applications that may be in use.

Bleeping Computer noted that this first link leads to further downloads that are performed before that actual malware is executed. This multilayered approach gives the threat actors greater control over what is actually done on the victim machines based, for example, on the user’s location. In the Facebook-based campaign, a DLL file that is loaded at the last stage of infection will be empty if the user IP is not between a certain range. Only the desired IP addresses will receive the poisoned file that contains a Trojan.

Not Their First Rodeo

The group behind these security breaches seems to have had extensive experience targeting Brazilian users. According to Bleeping Computer, researchers believed that this is the same group that ran the Banload Trojan campaign in 2016 as well as the Escelar Trojan of 2015.

The group also uses sophisticated tracking techniques to gauge how the spammed mail performs. Tracking images are embedded within the email and served by goo.gl shortened links. This can allow them to track how many messages were opened. With this technique, it was found that users opened the mail 200,000 times on Sept. 2 alone.

Facebook has been informed of the situation.

More from

NIST’s role in the global tech race against AI

4 min read - Last year, the United States Secretary of Commerce announced that the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has been put in charge of launching a new public working group on artificial intelligence (AI) that will build on the success of the NIST AI Risk Management Framework to address this rapidly advancing technology.However, recent budget cuts at NIST, along with a lack of strategy implementation, have called into question the agency’s ability to lead this critical effort. Ultimately, the success…

Researchers develop malicious AI ‘worm’ targeting generative AI systems

2 min read - Researchers have created a new, never-seen-before kind of malware they call the "Morris II" worm, which uses popular AI services to spread itself, infect new systems and steal data. The name references the original Morris computer worm that wreaked havoc on the internet in 1988.The worm demonstrates the potential dangers of AI security threats and creates a new urgency around securing AI models.New worm utilizes adversarial self-replicating promptThe researchers from Cornell Tech, the Israel Institute of Technology and Intuit, used what’s…

Passwords, passkeys and familiarity bias

5 min read - As passkey (passwordless authentication) adoption proceeds, misconceptions abound. There appears to be a widespread impression that passkeys may be more convenient and less secure than passwords. The reality is that they are both more secure and more convenient — possibly a first in cybersecurity.Most of us could be forgiven for not realizing passwordless authentication is more secure than passwords. Thinking back to the first couple of use cases I was exposed to — a phone operating system (OS) and a…

Topic updates

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