FortiGuard Labs is aware of a report that Roadsweep ransomware was used against the Albanian government. Other malware Chimneysweep backdoor and ZeroCleare wiper malware were potentially used in the attack.Why is this Significant?This is significant because a new ransomware was reportedly used against the Albanian government, a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). A security vendor Mandiant, with moderate confidence, attributed the attack to an unknown threat actor who supports Iran.The attack potentially involved Chimneysweep backdoor and ZeroCleare wiper malware. The former provides backdoor access to the attacker and the latter enables the threat actor to overwrite specified files, making the affected files unrecoverable.An alleged threat actor claimed responsibility for the attack on web site and telegram channel and released information supposedly belonging to the victims in Albanian government organizations on them.What is Roadsweep Malware?Roadseep is a new ransomware that encrypts files that do not have a “.exe”, “.dll”, “.sys”, “.lnk” and “.lckon” file extension on a compromised machine and adds a “.lck” file extension to them. It drops a ransom note that contains a politically inclined message and asks the victim to make a phone call to the attacker in order to decrypt the affected files. The ransom note also includes private recovery keys. What is Chimneysweep Malware?Chimneysweep is a malware that provides the attacker a backdoor access to a compromised machine. The malware connects to its C2 server and enables the remote attacker to execute commands. Such commands include capturing screenshots, downloading and executing files, downloading and installing plugins and collecting information from the compromised machine.According to Manidant, Chimneysweeper was dropped along with non-malicious Microsoft Office files or a video file by a digitally signed Self-Extracting cab file.What is ZeroCleare Malware?ZeroCleare is a destructive malware that was previously used against Middle Eastern energy companies in mid-2019. ZeroCleare is known to abuse a legitimate third-party driver for data wiping activity and is believed to have some semblance with another wiper malware “Shamoon”. According to Mandiant, a new ZeroCleare variant is capable of wiping drives specified by the attacker as opposed only wiping the system drive. That was not seen in the previous variant.This year, FortiGuard Labs published a blog on history of wiper malware that includes ZeroCleare. See the Appendix for a link to “An Overview of the Increasing Wiper Malware Threat”.What is the Status of Coverage?FortiGuard Labs detect known Ransomsweep samples with the following AV signatures:W32/Filecoder.OLZ!tr.ransomW32/Filecoder.OLZ!trFortiGuard Labs provide the following AV signatures against Chimneysweep malware:W32/Chimneysweep.A!trW32/Agent.PEI!tr.spyW32/Agent.PTQ!tr.spyW32/Generic.AC.3F197DW32/PossibleThreatPossibleThreat.MU FortiGuard Labs provide the following AV signatures against ZeroCleare malware:W32/Trojan_Win64_ZEROCLEARE.SMAW32/Trojan_Win64_ZEROCLEARE.SMBW32/Agent.XACVYS!trW32/Distrack!trW32/PossibleThreatAll network IOCs are blocked by the WebFiltering client.
Category Archives: Advisories
Critical Patches Issued for Microsoft Products, August 09, 2022
Multiple vulnerabilities have been discovered in Microsoft products, the most severe of which could allow for remote code execution in the context of the logged on user. Depending on the privileges associated with the user, an attacker could then install programs; view, change, or delete data; or create new accounts with full user rights. Users whose accounts are configured to have fewer user rights on the system could be less impacted than those who operate with administrative user rights.
Critical Patches Issued for Microsoft Products, August 09, 2022
Multiple vulnerabilities have been discovered in Microsoft products, the most severe of which could allow for remote code execution in the context of the logged on user. Depending on the privileges associated with the user, an attacker could then install programs; view, change, or delete data; or create new accounts with full user rights. Users whose accounts are configured to have fewer user rights on the system could be less impacted than those who operate with administrative user rights.
zlib-1.2.11-31.fc35
FEDORA-2022-b58a85e167
Packages in this update:
zlib-1.2.11-31.fc35
Update description:
Fix for CVE-2018-25032
zlib-1.2.11-32.fc36
FEDORA-2022-3a92250fd5
Packages in this update:
zlib-1.2.11-32.fc36
Update description:
Fix for CVE-2018-25032
Multiple Vulnerabilities in VMware vRealize Operations Could Allow for Remote Code Execution
Multiple vulnerabilities have been discovered in VMware vRealize Operations, the most severe of which could result in Remote Code Execution. VMware vRealize Operations is an IT management platform which enables visibility, optimization and management of an organization’s physical, virtual and cloud infrastructure. This software comes within an API which enables developers to build vRealize Operations clients to communicate with the server over HTTP. Successful exploitation of the most severe of these vulnerabilities could allow the attacker to execute code in context of the application. Depending on the permission associated with the application running the exploit, an attacker could then install programs; view, change, or delete data
Multiple Vulnerabilities in VMware vRealize Operations Could Allow for Remote Code Execution
Multiple vulnerabilities have been discovered in VMware vRealize Operations, the most severe of which could result in Remote Code Execution. VMware vRealize Operations is an IT management platform which enables visibility, optimization and management of an organization’s physical, virtual and cloud infrastructure. This software comes within an API which enables developers to build vRealize Operations clients to communicate with the server over HTTP. Successful exploitation of the most severe of these vulnerabilities could allow the attacker to execute code in context of the application. Depending on the permission associated with the application running the exploit, an attacker could then install programs; view, change, or delete data