Lumma Stealer Is Back & Stealthier Than Ever
The operators of the popular and prolific malware wasted no time in regrouping after an FBI takedown in May, and they're back to their old tricks.
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The operators of the popular and prolific malware wasted no time in regrouping after an FBI takedown in May, and they're back to their old tricks.
The FBI and partners have disrupted "the world's most popular malware," a sleek enterprise with thousands of moving parts, responsible for millions of cyberattacks in every part of the world.
The FBI's Denver field office says the tools will convert documents while also dropping malware and scraping users' systems for sensitive data.
Two hacker groups were paid to develop malware targeting victims in the US, Europe, and Asia, as well as various Chinese dissident groups.
A collaboration with the FBI and law-enforcement agencies in Europe, the UK, and Australia, Operation Magnus has seized servers and source code related to the two malware families, which have stolen data from millions of victims worldwide.
Once a user's device is infected as part of an ongoing Flax Typhoon APT campaign, the malware connects it to a botnet called Raptor Train, initiating malicious activity.
Sophisticated social engineering is expected to accompany threat campaigns that are highly targeted and aimed at stealing crypto and deploying malware.
Threat actors using the malware have infected systems within government, healthcare, and other critical infrastructure organizations since at least 2019.
The group's use of malware that forces Windows computers to reboot into Safe Mode before encrypting files is noteworthy, advisory says.
Operation "Medusa" disabled Turla's Snake malware with an FBI-created tool called Perseus.
Hackers can compromise public charging hubs to steal data, install malware on phones, and more, threatening individuals and businesses alike.
The FBI's latest Private Industry Notification warns the energy sector that the group behind Triton is still up to no good.