Kaspersky Lab identifies April’s malicious spam Trojan Matryoshka
Malicious attachments in April came disguised as e-greetings and notifications about faxes. In the case of the former, alleged Easter greetings turned out to be the Fareit.aonw Trojan with fairly limited functionality: it didn’t try to steal any passwords, but did download and launch a far more dangerous Zbot Trojan-Spy designed to attack servers and steal personal data.
Kaspersky Lab detected several large malicious attacks in April disguised as faxes sent by the popular online fax service eFax, which allows users to send and receive faxes as email attachments. The fake messages usually included a notification about an incoming fax, and to be more persuasive, it would indicate the number of pages in the fax. However, the zip file actually contained malware, specifically Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Cabby.a – a rather small Trojan downloader that carries a CAB file in its body with the document or graphic that is displayed to the recipient after launching.
The category of organizations most frequently targeted by phishers in April was “Email and search engine sites”, accounting for 31.9% of attacks. “Social networks” were in the second place with 23.8% (a drop of 0.2-percentage points). “Financial and payment organizations” came third with 13% (0.2-percentage points less than March).
“Last month, we saw a new wave of so-called pump-and-dump spam. The scammers behind these mailings advertised offers to buy stock in a certain company at super-low prices, which were allegedly meant to increase considerably in the near future. As a result, the demand for the stock in the company rose, the prices became artificially inflated – and the scammers would then sell off their stock in the said company. The stock prices would then begin to fall, and the bamboozled investors were left with depreciated shares and lost their investments. As a rule, scammers tend to choose little known companies for these schemes, where the stock is traded on a secondary market. In April, they used Rich Pharmaceuticals, a US company,” commented Tatyana Shcherbakova, Senior Spam Analyst, Kaspersky Lab.
The percentage of spam in the global email traffic in April averaged 71.1% - an increase of 7.6-percentage points compared to the previous month.
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