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Summary
A new variant of the Petya ransomware has been discovered.
Affected platforms
The following platforms are known to be affected:
Threat details
The ransomware's dropper is delivered by a drive-by attack when a user is visiting a legitimate compromised website. The dropper is a fake Adobe Flash Player installer which, when clicked, will execute BadRabbit.
BadRabbit utilities a hardcoded combo (username and password) list along with credentials scraped from memory by binaries in order to propagate through an internal network via SMB.
Once the malware completes the file encryption the ransom note is displayed on the user’s device.
Remediation steps
| Type | Step |
|---|---|
If a computer on your network becomes infected with ransomware it will begin encrypting local machine files and files on any network the logged-in user has permission to access. For system administration accounts this may include backup storage locations. To avoid becoming infected with ransomware, ensure that:
Identifying the source of infection: Identifying the infected machine and unplugging / disconnecting or quarantining it from the network is essential to damage limitation.
To limit the damage of ransomware and enable recovery: All critical data must be backed up, and these backups must be sufficiently protected/kept out of reach of ransomware.
The only guaranteed way to recover from a ransomware infection is to restore all affected files from their most recent backup. |
Last edited: 11 January 2022 9:23 am