ONI Ransomware
ONI ransomware and its bootkit variant MBR-ONI have been seen being used in targeted attacks. The ransomware was used to cover up evidence of a more sophisticated attack.
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Summary
ONI ransomware and its bootkit variant MBR-ONI have been seen being used in targeted attacks. The ransomware was used to cover up evidence of a more sophisticated attack.
Affected platforms
The following platforms are known to be affected:
Threat details
In previous ONI ransomware attacks the method of infection is a phishing email that has zip file attachment containing a macro that downloads a remote administration tool. Once the attackers had access and had finished wiping the logs of their activity, they would install ONI or MBR-ONI onto the network.
ONI can encrypt files on removable media and network drives. MBR-ONI has been mainly targeted at Active Directory servers. The code for ONI does allow recovery of the encrypted disk if the correct decryption key is applied.
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 4:51 pm