Two weeks after the issuance of security alerts by France on Japan και τη Νέα Ζηλανδία για την αύξηση της δραστηριότητας του Emotet, new warnings were published in Italy the Netherlands, but also from Microsoft.
These new alerts come as Emotet activity continues to grow, overshadowing any other malware activity that is active today.
Emotet is by far the largest malware botnet. It was dormant for most of this year, from February to July, but apparently came back for good.
Unfortunately, the inactivity did not last long, and Emotet operators are completely back in control of their botnet, which they use to send more and more unwanted messages.
These spam emails come with malicious files, which infect the host with the Emotet malware. The gang soon after sells her access on these infected hosts to other gangs of ransomware administrators
Many times, and especially in large corporate environments, an Emotet infection can turn into an ransomware attack within a few hours.
This is why the services cyber security and CERT teams in France, Japan, New Zealand, Italy and the Netherlands are treating Emotet's spam campaigns with such fear that they are issuing alerts to strengthen defenses.
Emotet currently prefers to use a technique called "email chains" or "hijacked treads."
For the technique used by the Emotet gang, it first steals an existing email chain from an infected host and then responds to emails using the existing subject. The spy email comes with a forged ID, and contains a malicious document, hoping to trick the email chain participants into opening the attachment and infecting their system.
Emotet has been using this technique since October 2018 but has improved it a lot lately.
The technique is quite clever and effective and has been broken down in one report published today by Palo Alto Networks.
However, alerts from Microsoft and the Italian authorities also warn of another recent change in Emotet junk mail campaigns, which now use password-protected ZIP files instead of Office documents.
The idea is that using such files is password protected, email security portals can not open the file to scan its contents and will not see any traces of malware it contains.
Emotet joined the password-protected attachment bandwagon with a campaign starting Friday. The campaign slowed down over the weekend (typical of Emotet) but was back today in even larger volumes of emails in English, as well as in some European languages. pic.twitter.com/POppQ51uMX
— Microsoft Threat Intelligence (@MsftSecIntel) September 22, 2020