Malware

New Terdot Malware operate as a MITM Proxy & Take over FB and Twitter by Steal Browsing Information

Highly sophisticated and customised Terdot Malware Discovered that has been developed by inspiration of wide spreaded Dangerous Zeus Banking Malware.

Terdot considering as very stealthy Malware that has an ability to steal the Browsing information such as login credentials and stored credit card information, as well as inject HTML code in visited Web pages and also it operates a MiTM Proxy.

unlike other Banking Trojan, it also having the eavesdropping capability and using this technique, it can able to modifying the traffic on most social media and email platforms also it can download and execute any files when requested by its operator using automatic updating capability.

The banking malware mostly targeted Canada the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, and Australia countries and attacking the organization such as PCFinancial, Desjardins, BMO, Royal Bank, the Toronto Dominion Bank, Banque Nationale, Scotiabank, CIBC and Tangerine Bank.

Terdot targeted social networks inclide Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and YouTube. Interestingly, the malware is specifically instructed not to gather any data from vk.com, Russia’s largest social media platform.

Also Read: Hidden Cryptocurrency Miner Coinhive’s Rapid Growth and it’s Prevention Techniques

How Does this Terdot Malware Spreading

InitiallyTerdot Banking malware spreading via Email that contains a button with the PDF icon on it.

PDF icon contains an obfuscated javascript embedded with it.once victim clicks the icon then it will get executed and later it will download and run the malware.

Another primary infection vector Sundown Exploit Kit also apparently delivering the Terdot family.

Terdot Delivering the payload with complex chain dropper to protect it to evade the detection until complete Terdot files and third-party utilities are downloaded on the disk that is completely encrypted.

 

Infection Chain

According to Bitdefender, To read browser traffic, Terdot injects itself into browser processes, where it hooks very low-level network socket operations to direct all connections to its own local proxy server. This server inspects the traffic, forwards the request to the intended target, receives the response, then it sends it back to the victim’s browser, possibly altering it in the process.
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