Tag Archive for: Finds

Monero Mining Malware Finds Success at Top of Google Search


  • Nitrokod is currently featured at the top of Google search results for popular apps, including Translate
  • The malware maliciously mines monero using users’ computer resources, echoing once-prolific CoinHive

An insidious malware campaign targeting users searching for Google applications has infected thousands of computers globally to mine privacy-focused crypto monero (XMR).

You’ve probably never heard of Nitrokod. Israeli-based cyber intelligence firm Check Point Research (CPR) stumbled upon the malware last month. 

In a report on Sunday, the firm said Nitrokod initially masks itself as a free software, having found remarkable success at the top of Google search results for “Google Translate desktop download.”

Also known as cryptojacking, mining malware has been used to infiltrate unsuspecting user’s machines since at least 2017, when they rose to prominence alongside crypto’s popularity.

CPR previously detected well-known cryptojacking malware CoinHive, which also mined XMR, in November of that year. CoinHive was said to be stealing 65% of an end-user’s total CPU resources without their knowledge. Academics calculated the malware was generating $250,000 per month at its peak, with the bulk of it going to less than a dozen individuals.

As for Nitrokod, CPR believes it was deployed by a Turkish-speaking entity sometime in 2019. It operates across seven stages as it moves along its path to avoid detection from typical antivirus programs and system defenses. 

“The malware is easily dropped from software found on top Google search results for legitimate applications,” the firm wrote in its report.

Softpedia and Uptodown were found to be two major sources of fake applications. Blockworks has reached out to Google to learn more about how it filters these kinds of threats.

Image source: Check Point Research

After downloading the application, an installer executes a delayed dropper and continuously updates itself on every restart. On the fifth day, the delayed dropper extracts an encrypted file. 

The file then initiates Nitrokod’s final stages, which sets about scheduling tasks,…

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Many businesses still exposed to hacking vulnerability discovered last year, cyber firm finds


A widespread cyber vulnerability overwhelming businesses and governments remains unresolved since its discovery last year.

Software security firm Rezilion said almost 60% of software packages affected by problems in the open-source logging platform, Log4J, were not patched four months after its discovery and the Biden administration is warning that hackers are continuing to exploit the flaw.

Rezilion said active exploitation attempts of the software’s vulnerability, Log4Shell, are ongoing and pointed to advanced persistent threats (APT) from China and Iran as among the cyberattackers who are using the flaw.

Yotam Perkal, Rezilion head of research, said his team is seeing a pattern of people not paying attention to the risks posed by the security flaw in the widely used computer code, despite warnings from the private and public sectors, including the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.

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Insignia wealth firm failed to fend off cybercrime, court finds


Instead, it ruled that RI Advice engage investigators Security in Depth to conduct a review of the firm’s risk management protocols relating to “cybersecurity and cyber resilience” and provide a written report to the regulator within 30 days.

“These cyberattacks were significant events that allowed third parties to gain unauthorised access to sensitive personal information,” said ASIC deputy chairwoman Sarah Court.

“It is imperative for all entities, including licensees, to have adequate cybersecurity systems in place to protect against unauthorised access.”

A spokeswoman for Insignia said the company had already implemented a “cyber resilience initiative” covering the RI Advice business and about 300 financial advice practices operating under its licence around the country.

“RI Advice has implemented a broad range of measures to manage any potential cyber risks going forward,” the spokeswoman said.

“The court’s judgment relates to historic cybersecurity incidents which occurred prior to that time. This matter has been resolved.”

ANZ, which owned RI Advice during the period in which a number of the cyberattacks took place, declined to comment.

Circular Quay incident

According to court documents, RI Advice sustained nine cybersecurity incidents over a seven-year period from 2014 to 2020. Among them was a ransomware attack in late December 2016 against RI Advice-aligned firm Wise Financial Planning, which hacked an office computer and “encrypted files and made them inaccessible”.

A separate cybersecurity incident occurred in May 2017 involving fellow RI Advice member RetireInvest Circular Quay, after which “[RI Advice] should have, but failed to properly review the effectiveness of cybersecurity controls … across its network”, ASIC’s statement of claim alleged.

Subsequent incidents involving RI Advice members Frontier Financial Group and RI Shepparton occurred in late 2017 and mid-2018, resulting in Security in Depth slapping a “poor” rating on the business.

The court documents also allege RI Advice’s cybersecurity processes were complicated by the transition of the company from ANZ to IOOF’s ownership.

In a separate matter stemming from the…

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Facebook Finds More Ukraine-Themed Hacking, Disinformation


Facebook also identified separate campaigns, which the company blocked, where hackers associated with the Iranian government attempted to create fake profiles. Attackers posed as recruiters, human rights activists or academics, to trick specific targets including dissidents, politicians and journalists into engaging and downloading malicious software to their computers.

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