EVOSEC

Attention! “Live HTTP Headers” – a Chrome extension that tracks clicks

One of our clients has reported unusual behavior while using this extension to track / develop a website and the associated webapp.

Seems like the extension has been modified to inject tracking [that’s the least we found out from our quick investigation]. A part of the code used can be found here:
https://gist.github.com/mala/e87973df5029d96c9269d9431fcef5cb

We recommend anyone using this extension to uninstall it and carefully investigate.

Problemas De Entrega De Correio Hotmail, ICloud Ou Outlook?

Nós vou verificar seu servidor, sua configuração de registros DNS, se seu servidor/IP está na lista negra de alguma forma (e, mais importante, por que) e creditaremos um relatório ou bate-papo seu departamento/suporte de ti. Depois disso, podemos corrigir todos os problemas para você ou mostrar seu departamento/serviço de ti …

New IoT Malware? Anime/Kami

During August 2016, we came across several devices that were infected with a new malware that we couldn’t identify – for now. It resides in a read-write partition of some CCTV devices (most partitions on these devices are read-only), in a folder called .anime under the name .kami. It seems the attack used hard-coded telnet credentials and then downloaded the now-unknown malware(or maybe created the file via “echo” commands).

CCTV Malware

We failed to identify it, since it’s truncated – the final file seems to be bigger than the partition it was created on (mounted as /mnt/mtd).

.kami: ERROR: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Renesas SH, version 1 (SYSV), statically linkederror reading (Invalid argument)

The MD5 of it:

cdd887f2112b3d87b96154ca492368a8 .kami

For now, all we can recommend is to move devices from DMZ to proper port-forwarding and, where needed, install a router as a firewall in front of them.