RansomHub Rolls Out Brand-New, EDR-Killing BYOVD Binary
After loading a vulnerable driver, the utility uses a public exploit to gain privilege escalation and the ability to disable endpoint protection software.
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Background for this topic.
Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) is software that records endpoint activity—such as process launches, file changes, scripts, logins, and network connections—to detect suspicious behavior and support investigation. It can alert analysts, trace an intrusion across affected devices, and take actions such as isolating an endpoint or terminating a process. Its purpose is to reduce attacker dwell time and limit movement after an endpoint is compromised.
EDR is most useful against techniques that evade simple antivirus signatures, but it is not a guarantee of visibility: attackers may exploit unmonitored devices, disable or tamper with an agent, or blend into legitimate administration. Effective deployment requires broad, maintained coverage; protected agents and access controls; sensible alert tuning; and retention of telemetry for threat hunting and scoping incidents. Organizations should regularly test isolation and response actions, address agent and endpoint vulnerabilities, and account for the privacy and access implications of collecting detailed user and device activity.
After loading a vulnerable driver, the utility uses a public exploit to gain privilege escalation and the ability to disable endpoint protection software.
RansomHub ransomware operators have been spotted deploying new malware to disable Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) security software in Bring Your Own Vulnerable Driver (BYOVD) attacks [...]
A cybercrime group with links to the RansomHub ransomware has been observed using a new tool designed to terminate endpoint detection and response (EDR) software on compromised hosts, joining the likes of other similar programs like AuKill (aka AvNeutralizer) and Terminator