Microsoft Teams Targeted With Takeover Trojans
Threat actors are infiltrating the increasingly popular collaboration app to attach malicious files to chat threads that drop system-hijacking malware.
Coverage of Trojan malware examines reported incidents, technical analysis, infrastructure, disruption efforts, and defensive guidance for reducing cyber risk.
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Background for this topic.
A Trojan is malware that masquerades as legitimate, useful, or necessary software so a user or process runs it. “Trojan” describes a delivery or deception technique rather than one malware family; capabilities vary by sample and may include credential theft, surveillance, file manipulation, or remote access. Unlike self-propagating malware, a Trojan generally depends on being installed or executed through some other means.
Security analysis should identify the specific family and executable behavior rather than treating every Trojan as equivalent. Material concerns include untrusted software and tampered installers, execution under excessive privileges, and unauthorized persistence or access to sensitive data. Defenses include using trusted software sources and code-signature or application-control checks, limiting user privileges, monitoring endpoint process and network activity, and isolating suspected hosts. After detection, preserve relevant evidence, remove persistence, assess credential exposure, and investigate other affected systems before returning the device to normal use.
Threat actors are infiltrating the increasingly popular collaboration app to attach malicious files to chat threads that drop system-hijacking malware.
The resurgent trojan has targeted 60 top companies to harvest credentials for a wide range of applications, with an eye to virulent follow-on attacks.
Entities in the aviation, aerospace, transportation, manufacturing, and defense industries have been targeted by a persistent threat group since at least 2017 as part of a string of spear-phishing campaigns mounted to deliver a variety of remote access trojans (RATs) on compromised systems
35K+ players were exposed to an auto-updater that planted a trojan that choked performance for fellow modders and Colossal Order employees.