The survey shows that the Houdini worm developer also appears to be one of the founders of the MoWare HFD variant of the open source extortion software. Security experts say the malicious script released by the Pastebin website Visual Basic peaked in August, October, and March, and most of the script was used by an attacker to spread the Houdini worm. This type of attack first appeared in 2013 and updated in 2016.
Thursday, 29 June 2017
German hackers use the Pastebin website to spread Houdini worms
According to foreign media reported on the 27th, Recorded
Future security experts found a German hacker through the Pastebin
website spread Houdini worm.
The survey shows that the Houdini worm developer also appears to be one of the founders of the MoWare HFD variant of the open source extortion software. Security experts say the malicious script released by the Pastebin website Visual Basic peaked in August, October, and March, and most of the script was used by an attacker to spread the Houdini worm. This type of attack first appeared in 2013 and updated in 2016.
Recorded
Future found 213 malicious posts on the Pastebin website, including a
first-level domain with 105 subdomains. Analysis shows that the
first-level domain name and sub-domain name from the dynamic DNS
provider, because the attacker is the use of other users to publish
Houdini worm malicious script, security experts can confirm the
information only: from the German registrant Mohammed Rad (Mohammed
Raad) , The relevant email is “vicsworsbaghdad@gmail.com”.
Google
found the above information and found Facebook profile using the same
information. The survey shows that Mohammed Raad is one of the main
members of the German Anonymous organization. In addition, Facebook’s profile also includes the member’s recent conversations related to the blackmail software MoWare HFD.
The survey shows that the Houdini worm developer also appears to be one of the founders of the MoWare HFD variant of the open source extortion software. Security experts say the malicious script released by the Pastebin website Visual Basic peaked in August, October, and March, and most of the script was used by an attacker to spread the Houdini worm. This type of attack first appeared in 2013 and updated in 2016.
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