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Security Research

Fake VPN Sites Deliver Infostealers

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MOHD SADIQUE
April 14, 2020 - 8 Min de lectura

Because of the worldwide call for social distancing, many people working from home and taking classes online for the first time are turning to the virtual private network (VPN) for security and privacy. But, as we’ve all seen (and ThreatLabZ has reported in several blogs covering CovidLock ransomware and a coronavirus scam, among others), attackers are attempting to use the pandemic for financial gain. A new campaign is using the demand for VPNs to trick users into downloading and installing malware by masquerading as a legitimate VPN client.

As part of our ongoing research, we monitor newly registered domains (NRDs) because they can be sources of new malware campaigns. We recently came across NRDs for multiple websites pretending to offer free VPN clients. When the user downloads and executes the VPN client, it runs in the background and installs an infostealer and serves other malware, such as a Remote Access Trojan and banking Trojan.

In this blog we will discuss the fake Nord VPN site, the fake VPN4Test site, the malware they serve, and their infostealer capabilities.

1. Fake Nord VPN site

Fake Nord VPN site

Fig 1: Fake Nord VPN site

Whois info of fake Nord VPN site

Fig 2: Whois info of fake Nord VPN site

Domain: nordfreevpn[.]com
URL: nordfreevpn[.]com/NordVPNSetup.exe

When a user tries to install a VPN client from this site, it downloads the encrypted payload from the web, decrypts it, and loads it in memory for execution. So, the user ends up installing Grand Stealer malware, which has several capabilities, including stealing various user credentials and cryptocurrency wallets.

Fake Nord VPN site overview

Fig 3: Fake Nord VPN site overview

The downloaded file (NordVPNSetup.exe) from this fake VPN site is a MSIL-built executable file. It is a loader that downloads an encrypted payload, decrypts it, and executes it in memory. The URL to download the next payload is encrypted inside the binary. First, the binary decrypts the URL with the decryption logic shown in Fig 4.

Decryption Logic

Fig 4: Decryption logic

Encoded URL: "softJsonLinqExtensionsValuesdZNjAaLxx2FiQzL3BdBHsSAisTNCgLWwcYPSQ7OR4vLAQxLRMXPh1bIC52QygIWTFcKQleOwYuNyYkEgxb"
XOR key: “gJjLJDzQihIn”

This encoded URL is getting parsed, Base64 decoded, then XORed with a hardcoded key.

Decoded URL: "hxxps://ws38[.]watashinonegai[.]ru/GflawIpmuSbP"

It downloads the encrypted data from this URL as shown in Fig 5.

Encrypted payload

Fig 5: Encrypted payload

This encrypted data is decrypted with the same decryption logic used to decrypt the encrypted URL.

Decrypted_data = Base64_decode(Base64_decode(XOR(Base64_decode(Encrypted_data), Key)))

Script for data decryption

Fig 6: Script for data decryption

The binary enumerates the DotNet directory path (C:\\Windows\\Microsoft.NET\\Framework\\[version]) and then creates the suspended process of first executable file (AddInProcess.exe), Unmaps its memory and then injects the decrypted payload inside it and executes the process.
 

1.1 Grand Stealer

This malware steals the following information from the infected system.

  • Browser profiles (credentials, cookies, credit cards, auto fill)
  • Gecko credentials
  • FTP credentials
  • RDP credentials
  • Telegram sessions
  • Cryptocurrency wallets
  • Discord software data
  • Desktop files
  • Screenshots

Data to steal

Fig 7: Data to steal

It collects login data, web data, cookies, and credit card information stored in the Chromium browser.

Stealing credit card data

Fig 8: Stealing credit card data

It also searches for the below files in %appdata% and steals browsers profiles such as credentials and cookies.

“key3.db”, “key4.db”, “cookies.sqlite”, “logins.json”

The malware is able to steal wallets from the following cryptocurrency products.

  • Litecoin
  • Monero
  • Bytecoin
  • Electrum
  • Ethereum
  • Exodus

Stealing wallets data

Fig 9: Stealing wallets data

For FTP credentials, it searches for “%appdata%\\FileZilla\\recentservers.xml” or “%appdata%\\FileZilla\\recentmanager.xml” and steals the credentials from that.

For Telegram sessions, it enumerates “%appdata\\Telegram Desktop\\tdata\\D877F783D5D3EF8C\\map*” and steals all the files that start with a map.

It also captures the current screen and collects all the files stored on the desktop and sends it to the command-and-control (C&C) server. The address of C&C server is hardcoded inside the binary and it creates a websocket session for communication.

ws://195.161[.]41[.]243:2012/websocket


First, it requests the server for the configurations and, based on that, it collects the data and sends it back to the server.


Grand stealer C2 communication

Fig 10: Grand stealer C2 communication

 

2. Fake VPN4Test site

Fake VPN4Test site

Fig 11: Fake VPN4Test site

Whois info of fake VPN4Test site

Fig 12: Whois info of fake VPN4Test site

Domain : vpn4test[.]net
URL : hxxps://vpn4test[.]net/VPN4Test-Setup.exe

When a user tries to install a fake VPN client from this site, it downloads the encoded config data from the web, downloads the malware payload from the URL given in config data—which in this case is Azorult infostealer—and executes it.
 

Fake VPN4Test site overview

Fig 13: Fake VPN4Test site overview

The downloaded file (VPN4Test-Setup.exe) from this site is again a MSIL-built executable. It is a loader module that downloads a configuration for the payload from the web and, based on that configuration, it downloads the payload and executes it on the system.

This loader first extracts the IP geolocation information by calling the API “hxxp://ip-api[.]com/line/?fields=61439”.

Based on the collected information, it forms a URL to download the configuration data.

URL formation

Fig 14: URL formation

URL: hxxp://176.96.239[.]39:80/Gate[.]php?Data=<collected_data>


The collected data is the Base64-encoded combination of country index, IP address, hardware ID, country, username, and OS. It sends the web request on this URL and gets the response.

Requesting configuration from server

Fig 15: Requesting configuration from server

The response is Base64-encoded data. It is a comma-separated string that includes:
<ID>,ALL,WebFile,<Payload_URL>,<Destination_directory>,<File_name>

In our case, the decoded config is:
1834,ALL,WebFile,hxxp://51[.]83[.]210[.]220/au.exe,Appdata,au.exe

After getting this configuration, the loader downloads the payload from the payload URL and stores it on “%appdata%” with the name “au.exe” and executes it.

 Loader config parsing

Fig 16:  Loader config parsing

In this case, the final payload is an infostealer called Azorult.
 

2.1 Azorult Infostealer

Azorult is an information stealer that harvests and exfiltrates saved passwords, browser login credentials, cookies, history, chat sessions, cryptocurrency wallet files, and screen captures. It may often download additional malware onto the infected system.

The malware first generates a bot ID to uniquely identify the host machine. Once it is generated, it is encoded and encrypted with 3bytes and sent to the C&C server.

Sends request to C2 with Bot ID

Fig 17: Sends request to C&C with bot ID

In response to this request, the server sends encoded configuration data. The configuration includes directory paths from where to steal the data, additional malware executables URLs, DLL modules required, targeted browsers, targeted cryptocurrency wallets, and all the suspicious strings used by the malware.

This version of Azorult tries to get sensitive information from the below programs.

Web browsers:
Google Chrome, Comodo Dragon, Amigo, Orbitum, Bromium, Chromium, Nichrome, RockMelt, Vivaldi, Go Browser, Sputnik, Kometa, Uran, QIP Surf, Epic Privacy Browser, Brave, Cent Browser, CocCoc, 7 Star, Elements Browser, Safer Technologies, Mustang, Superbird, Chedot, Torch, Firefox, Waterfox, IceDragon, Cyberfox, PaleMoon, InternetExplorer, Microsoft Edge, Opera , Xpom, YandexBrowser, 360Browser, TorBro, Suhba

Cryptocurrency wallets:
Electrum, Electrum-LTC, ElectrumG, Electrum-btcp, Jaxx, MultiBitHD, Monero, Bitcoin, BitcoinGold, BitCore, Litecoin, BitcoinABC, Exodus, Exodus Eden, Ethereum

Others:
Outlook, Filezilla, PSI+, WinScp, Skype, Telegram, Steam

All the stolen files are compressed in a ZIP file, combined with the browser’s data, and encrypted with the same 3bytes of XOR key before being sent to the C&C server.

Stolen data

Fig 18: Stolen data

This Azorult downloads and executes two additional pieces of malware from the URLs received in the config data.

Masad stealer : hxxp://51.83.210[.]220/build.exe
Parasite RAT : hxxp://51.83.210[.]220/svchost.exe


2.2 Masad Stealer

Masad Stealer uses Telegram to exfiltrate stolen information. After execution, it starts collecting sensitive information from the infected system, such as browser credentials, FTP credentials, cryptocurrency wallets, screenshots, Telegram data, and desktop files. It compresses this information into a file using the 7-ZIP utility.

Information stolen by Masad stealer

Fig 19: Information stolen by Masad Stealer

The Masad Stealer sends this 7-ZIP file using the sendDocument API to the C&C Telegram bot.
Telegram bot username: “MyVavilon_bot”
Telegram bot ID: “bot1119740172”


2.3 Parasite RAT

Like most RATs, Parasite HTTP offers information-stealing capabilities, VNC for observing or controlling a PC, and user management for bypassing permissions. It also advertises capabilities such as firewall bypass, optional system-wide persistence, and injection to white-listed system processes. It also features encryption for its C&C communications.

Parasite RAT communication

Fig 20: Parasite RAT communication

This variant of the Parasite RAT also downloads a DLL file which is NukeBot malware. NukeBot (aka Nuclear Bot) is a full-fledged banking trojan that includes a HiddenDesktop/VNC server and a reverse SOCKS4 server. It could steal passwords and inject arbitrary content when victims visited banking websites.
 

Coverage:

The observed indicators in this attack were successfully blocked by the Zscaler Cloud Sandbox service.

Zscaler Cloud Sandbox report for fake Nord VPN client

Fig 21: Zscaler Cloud Sandbox report for fake Nord VPN client
 

Zscaler Cloud Sandbox report for fake VPN4Test client

Fig 22: Zscaler Cloud Sandbox report for fake VPN4Test client

In addition to sandbox detections, Zscaler’s multilayered cloud security platform detects indicators at various levels.


IOCs:

nordfreevpn[.]com
nordfreevpn[.]com/NordVPNSetup[.]exe
ws38[.]watashinonegai[.]ru/GflawIpmuSbP
195[.]161[.]41[.]243:2012

vpn4test[.]net
vpn4test[.]net/VPN4Test-Setup[.]exe
176[.]96[.]239[.]39:80/Gate[.]php
51[.]83[.]210[.]220/au[.]exe
51[.]83[.]210[.]220/azor/index[.]php
51[.]83[.]210[.]220/build[.]exe
51[.]83[.]210[.]220/svchost[.]exe
51[.]83[.]210[.]220/index[.]php

F7C7CAE1EC7700D5449AE66B92D616C8 (NordVPNSetup.exe)
219DA5218B48F58896BBDE95100E2CF4 (Grand stealer, AddInProcess.exe)
5766E43D1AC9A8A6D6E0FDAEC5F63507 (VPN4Test-Setup.exe)
F0DF7D1DC6B89E522776BF3AE3C09431 (Azorult stealer, au.exe)
B093EB15D66808B141F320DCCB1A5178 (Masad stealer, build.exe)
83983EB434FE1183ECAA8149187067E6 (Parasite stealer, svchost.exe)
35D1BC49075E6D3B737DD59953AD33EB (NukeBot, plugin.dll)
 

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