Recent AZORult activity

Published: 2019-07-11
Last Updated: 2019-07-11 09:12:59 UTC
by Brad Duncan (Version: 1)
1 comment(s)

I found a tweet from @ps66uk from on Monday morning 2019-07-10 about an open directory used in malspam to push an information stealer called AZORult. The open directory is hosted on sfoodfeedf[.]org at www.sfoodfeedf[.]org/wp-includes/Requests/Cookie/


Shown above:  The open directory at sfoodfeedf[.]org.

@ps66uk already mentioned a file named purchase order.iso which is an ISO file containing an executable file for AZORult.  However, I found another one in the same directory named 201907060947039062.iso.  Further analysis showed it was also AZORult, like the other ISO file.


Shown above:  Getting the other ISO file.


Shown above:  Extracting the EXE file from the ISO on a Windows 7 host.

In previous AZORult infections in my lab, the malware usually deleted itself after an initial exfiltration of data.  This one repeatedly did callback traffic, and there was a .vbs file made persistent on my infected Windows host during the infection.  This is apparently a more recent variant of AZORult dubbed AZORult++ as described by Kaspersky Labs and followed-up by BleepingComputer.  It's called AZORult++ because it's now compiled in C++ after formerly being compiled in Delphi.


Shown above:  Traffic from the infection filtered in Wireshark.


Shown above:  TCP conversations from my infected Windows host.


Shown above:  An example of the AZORult callback traffic.


Shown above:  This AZORult EXE was compiled with C++, a characteristic of AZORult++.


Shown above:  VBS file made persistent on my infected Windows host.

Malware indicators

SHA256 hash: ed7c0a248904a026a0e3cabded2aa55607626b8c6cfc8ba76811feed157ecea8

Final words

Earlier this month on 2019-07-01, I saw an AZORult sample (also compiled in C++) which did the expected two HTTP post requests to exfiltrate data, then deleted itself from my infected host.  Today's example proves there can be some variation in AZORult infection activity.

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Brad Duncan
brad [at] malware-traffic-analysis.net

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Comments

As an FYI, WebSense/Triton listed that .org as "business & economy"

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