ESET Threat Blog

Archive for the 'Malware' Category

by Sebastian Bortnik Awareness & Research Coordinator at ESET Latin America
January 6, 2012 at 8:50 am

Many of you have read the last few weeks that we published posts on trends for 2012 in the field of malware and cybercrime. In this series I wrote a post based on the document that the Education and Research team of ESET Latin America put together, entitled "2012 Predictions: More mobile malware and localized … Read More…

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by Sebastian Bortnik Awareness & Research Coordinator at ESET Latin America
January 4, 2012 at 3:00 pm

As expected, malware developers and scam artists have greeted the death of North Korea's dictatorial leader, Kim Jong-il, with Black Hat SEO and Social Engineering attacks. The Supreme Leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea suffered a heart attack on a train journey last month and a steady stream of schemes to exploit the … Read More…

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by Sébastien Duquette Malware Researcher
December 30, 2011 at 1:01 pm

This article was written in collaboration with my colleague Jean-Ian Boutin.
The Wigon botnet (also known as Cutwail) is being used in a massive spam campaign. A multitude of ruses are used to get the user to click on a link: fake LinkedIn or Facebook notifications, free Windows licenses, fake deliveries etc. The links are pointing … Read More…

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by David Harley Senior Research Fellow
December 12, 2011 at 2:43 pm

If you've been following this blog for a few years, you probably know that I'm reluctant to play the prediction game, but it seems to be expected at this time of year, so here's my contribution. Java will consolidate its position as the successor to PDF and SWF in the favourite exploits stakes, the latest … Read More…

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by Stephen Cobb ESET Security Evangelist
December 9, 2011 at 2:42 pm

The FDIC is probably one of the most misunderstood quasi-governmental entities in America, which may account for its enduring popularity as part of malware and phishing scams. I'm not the most dedicated follower of banking news, but I did work for a bank once and I do try to keep up, yet I have never … Read More…

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by Robert Lipovsky Malware Researcher
November 3, 2011 at 7:21 am

Recently, a new data-stealing worm caught our attention. The reason why it stands out from many similar amateur creations is that its author is most probably Czech, as the text strings, variable and function names used by the malware suggest.

The Czech text above is displayed by the worm inside a console window and translates to: … Read More…

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by Pierre-Marc Bureau Senior Malware Researcher
November 18, 2011 at 7:39 am

Yesterday, ESET announced the discovery of a new threat against the Apple Mac OS X platform. Today, we have found a new version of the same threat. The new version is similar to the previous version with two important differences. The first addition to this threat is that it now implements persistence on an infected … Read More…

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by Robert Lipovsky Malware Researcher
October 26, 2011 at 11:50 am

We’ve just come across an IRC controlled backdoor that enables the infected machine to become a bot for Distributed Denial of Service attacks. The interesting part about it is that it’s a Mach-O binary – targeting Mac OS X. ESET’s research team compared this to samples in our malware collection and discovered that this code … Read More…

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by Robert Lipovsky Malware Researcher
October 11, 2011 at 11:23 am

ESET had quite a strong representation at Virus Bulletin this year in Barcelona, as David Harley mentioned in his post prior to the conference.
On the first day, Pierre-Marc Bureau presented his findings about the Kelihos botnet, David Harley and AVG’s Larry Bridwell discussed the usefulness and present state of AV testing, and to finish the … Read More…

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by Robert Lipovsky Malware Researcher
March 28, 2012 at 10:32 am

On Saturday, another controversial report of a “government trojan” appeared. This time it is the German government that has been accused by the European hacker club Chaos Computer Club (CCC) of using “lawful interception” malware. Hence, “Bundestrojaner” (Federal Trojan), though that name is normally applied to the legal concept that allows German police to make … Read More…

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