Ransomware

VHD Ransomware Linked to North Korea’s Cyber-Army Targets Financial Institutions

Experts from Trellix discovered that VHD Ransomware was linked to North Korea’s cyber army. The cyber-army of North Korea has been divided into several units, all of which have different tasks and report to ‘Bureau (or Lab) 121’.

Unit 180, also known as APT38 is responsible for the attacks on foreign financial systems, including banks and cryptocurrency exchanges.

The report says the actors of Unit 180 generally live in overseas countries such as China, Russia, Malaysia, Thailand, Bangladesh, Indonesia, India, Kenya, and Mozambique to hide the unit’s link to the hermit kingdom that is North Korea.

Also, the defectors have exposed that obtaining funds for the government is done by more actors than the country’s ‘elite hackers’.

VHD Ransomware

VHD is a standard ransomware tool that spreads through the drives connected to the target device, encrypts all the files, and deletes all system volume information folders that prevent the impacted system could be restored.

Researchers used the source code of the VHD ransomware family and identified the following families:

  • BEAF ransomware
  • PXJ ransomware
  • ZZZZ ransomware
  • CHiCHi ransomware

From the analysis, four letters of the ransomware “BEAF” (BEAF is the extension used for the encrypted files), are exactly the same first four bytes of the handshake of APT38’s tool known as Beefeater.

The ZZZZ ransomware is a replica of the Beaf ransomware family. Researchers say the Tflower and ChiChi families share some little code with VHD, but that would be more generic functions than typical shared code and functionality.

The experts used the Hilbert curves to visualize the code of the different malware families and found both Tflower and ChiChi are vastly different when compared to VHD.

Hilbert curve similarity

To identify financial trails with an overlap between the families, researchers extracted the Bitcoin (BTC) wallet addresses and started tracing and monitoring the transactions.

“We did not find any overlap in transfer wallets between the families. We did find, however, that the paid ransom amounts were relatively small.”, say the researchers.

Final Word

According to the experts from Trellix, besides global banks, blockchain providers and users from South Korea were also attacked using spear-phishing emails, fake mobile applications, and also fake companies.

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