Tag Archive for: Bitcoin

New MyloBot Malware Variant Sends Sextortion Emails Demanding $2,732 in Bitcoin


Sextortion Emails

A new version of the MyloBot malware has been observed to deploy malicious payloads that are being used to send sextortion emails demanding victims to pay $2,732 in digital currency.

MyloBot, first detected in 2018, is known to feature an array of sophisticated anti-debugging capabilities and propagation techniques to rope infected machines into a botnet, not to mention remove traces of other competing malware from the systems.

Chief among its methods to evade detection and stay under the radar included a delay of 14 days before accessing its command-and-control servers and the facility to execute malicious binaries directly from memory.

Automatic GitHub Backups

MyloBot also leverages a technique called process hollowing, wherein the attack code is injected into a suspended and hollowed process in order to circumvent process-based defenses. This is achieved by unmapping the memory allocated to the live process and replacing it with the arbitrary code to be executed, in this case a decoded resource file.

“The second stage executable then creates a new folder under C:\ProgramData,” Minerva Labs researcher Natalie Zargarov said in a report. “It looks for svchost.exe under a system directory and executes it in suspended state. Using an APC injection technique, it injects itself into the spawned svchost.exe process.”

Sextortion Emails

APC injection, similar to process hollowing, is also a process injection technique that enables the insertion of malicious code into an existing victim process via the asynchronous procedure call (APC) queue.

Prevent Data Breaches

The next phase of the infection involves establishing persistence on the compromised host, using the foothold as a stepping stone to establish communications with a remote server to fetch and execute a payload that, in turn, decodes and runs the final-stage malware.

This malware is designed to abuse the endpoint to send extortion messages alluding to the recipients’ online behaviors, such as visiting porn sites, and threatening to leak a video that was allegedly recorded by breaking into their computers’ webcam.

Minerva Labs’ analysis of the malware also reveals its ability to download additional files, suggesting that the threat actor left behind a backdoor for carrying out further…

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‘Hackers helped me find my lost Bitcoin fortune’


rhonda and megan kampert

Rhonda Kampert (left) used her recovered Bitcoin to help her daughter, Megan, through university

Rhonda Kampert was an early adopter.

She bought six Bitcoins in 2013, when they cost about $80 (£60) each, and were the chatter of niche corners of the internet.

“I used to listen to a radio talk show and they started talking about crypto and Bitcoin so I got interested,” she says.

“Back then buying it was so complicated but I fumbled my way through the process and bought my coins.”

Rhonda, who lives in the US state of Illinois, spent some of her digital money over the next year or so, then forgot about it.

But when she saw headlines late in 2017 announcing that the value of Bitcoin had risen to nearly $20,000 she excitedly went to her computer to log in and cash out.

‘It was awful’

Except there was a problem. She was missing some of the login details for her Bitcoin wallet – a computer program or device that stores a set of secret numbers, or private keys.

“I realised then that my printout had missed some digits on the end of my wallet identifier. I had a piece of paper with my password but no idea what my wallet ID was,” Rhonda says.

“It was awful. I tried everything for months but it was hopeless. So I kind of gave up.”

Fast forward to last spring and the value of Bitcoin soared above $50,000 – more than 600 times what Rhonda had paid eight years earlier.

Filled with a renewed determination to find her coins, she hit the internet and came across father and son crypto treasure hunters Chris and Charlie Brooks.

chris and charlie brooks

Charlie and Chris Brooks say they have recovered Bitcoins worth a seven-figure sum in the past year

“After talking to the guys online for a while I trusted them enough to hand over all the details I could remember. Then I waited,” she says.

“Eventually we sat down together on a video call and watched everything happen. Chris opened the wallet and there it was. I just felt so relieved!”

Rhonda’s wallet of three-and-a-half Bitcoin was at that point worth $175,000.

“I gave Chris and Charlie their 20%, then the first thing I did was take out $10,000 worth of my coins to help my daughter Megan through college.”

She says she’s keeping the rest locked away in a hardware wallet – a…

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4 billion dollar Bitcoin hack makes TikTok girl Heather Morgan an Internet sensation


More than 1,00,000 Bitcoin, US $4,000,000,000, one of the biggest crypto hacks in the world, hackers and money untraceable for nearly 6 years… Sounds like a major heist, doesn’t it?



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BitFinex was hacked in 2016 and millions of dollars worth Bitcoin was stolen.

The US Department of Justice has caught up to the hackers, arrested them and come in possession of the world’s largest crypto-holding wallet. But can you imagine who carried out such a sophisticated heist – perhaps state actors from North Korea or Russia, or some big mafia connection, shrouded in mystery and a black hoodie with no face?

All guesses are WRONG in this case!

The Crypto world has proved to be even more surreal and crazy than ever before. The hackers behind the 2016 Bitfinex hack are a TikTok girl named Heather Morgan who made cringey rap videos, and her husband of dual nationality – Russia and the US, who ran ‘cloud services and solutions business’.

The US DoJ arrested 31-year-old Heather Morgan and her husband 34-year-old Ilya Lichtenstein in the 2016 BitFinex hack. More than the movie plot-like-story behind the hack and the recovery, netizens are going gaga over Heather Morgan.

Heather Morgan has become an instant hit among netizens in the hack story due to her unique online persona, unlike anything anyone would have ever imagined a hacker to be. Heather made rap videos on YouTube, TikTok and elsewhere under the name Razzlekhan. She also gave speeches on growing businesses and called herself a ‘serial entrepreneur’ and an ‘angel investor’. She described her art as ‘surreal’, her genre as ‘horror-comedy, with a splash of weird allure’.



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Heather Morgan’s profile on Forbes.

Before this, she also worked for Forbes as a writer between 2017 and 2021. Her Forbes bio reads: When she’s not reverse-engineering…

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Quantum Computers Could Crack Bitcoin Security by the 2030s


Today, the Bitcoin network’s security, using a cryptographic algorithm called SHA-256, would be insurmountable for a computer as we know it to crack. But quantum computing may change that within the next decade. Scientists at the University of Sussex now estimate that quantum computers are likely to become powerful enough to crack the security that protects Bitcoins sometime in the next decade. New Scientist first reported on the study.

Bitcoin is based on a blockchain, essentially a ledger of who owns what, protected by the SHA-256 algorithm. If you could crack the key revealed during Bitcoin transactions, you could change ownership of a Bitcoin. The Sussex scientists, led by Mark Webber, explain that every Bitcoin transaction is assigned a cryptographic key, which is vulnerable for a finite time, which might vary from 10 minutes to an hour, to a day.

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