Amazon

Friday 26 June 2015

Scanned from a Xerox Multifunction Printer doc malware

Scanned from a Xerox Multifunction Printer.doc macro malware.

These emails aren't from these companies at all , they are just being used to make the email look more genuine, ie. from a real company.
Note
It's also worth remembering that the company itself  may not have any knowledge of this email and it's link(s) or attachment as it won't have come from their servers and IT systems but from an external bot net.

It's not advised to ring them as there won't really be anything they can do to help you.

Header:

Subject: Scanned from a Xerox Multifunction Printer

Message Body:
Please open the attached document.  It was scanned and sent to you using a Xerox Multifunction Printer.

Attachment File Type: DOC, Multi-Page

Multifunction Printer Location:
Device Name: XRX9C934E5EEC46


For more information on Xerox products and solutions, please visit http://www.xerox.com
Attachment:
Scanned from a Xerox Multifunction Printer.doc
Sha256 Hashes:
25e247c71cd4a50f5c97e3b69807faa5ac048da050c0180fd881f75d1577fe66 [1]
369c3e84e9a288b3f2df0672c3dd2eaa208c9d2e6ac10c36a04b9e3ff52f8b4d [2]
404a73f3cb148dfdd1e75aa498c7a8098352f4014eedf50c77db2c299bf70f24 [3]
a97b05797f326e8e8ba79f12d15a523096be31b13c19d7569b82995b957616ec [4]
fe9097d91e65bd70b4ae777e8fbdb139d39f0baadeca4ab40e9b584b002a2f1d [5]

Malware Virus Scanner Reports:
VirusTotal Report: [1] (detection 4/57)
VirusTotal Report: [2] (detection 4/57)
VirusTotal Report: [3] (detection 4/57)
VirusTotal Report: [4] (detection 4/57)
VirusTotal Report: [5] (detection 4/57)

NOTE

The current round of Word/Excel/XML attachments are targeted at Windows users.

Apple and Android software can open these attachments and may even manage to run the macro embedded inside the attachment.

The auto-download file is normally a windows executable and so will not currently run on  any operating system, apart from Windows.

However, if you are an Apple/Android user and forward the message to a Windows user, you will them put them at risk of opening the attachment and auto-downloading the malware.

Currently these attachments try to auto-download Dridex, which is designed to

steal login information regarding your bank accounts (either by key logging, taking auto-screens hots or copying information from your clipboard (copy/paste))

Cheers,
Steve

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

How did they manage to make those appear as sent from our own domain? Even in the message source only our domain appears. Strangely enough only a couple of accounts got that message.

Howdareyoudeletemycookies said...

You should put in place anti-spoof rules so all inbound mail is checked to have come from your email servers otherwise you'll get lots of spoofed mail. Our mail gateway blocked these mails due to spoofed sender, it got through Spam and AV modules.