New EvilQuest Ransomware for macOS Systems

Risk:
high
Damage:
high
Platform(s):
MAC OSX
Advisory ID:
ngCERT-2020-0009
Version:
NIL
CVE:
NIL
Published:
July 1, 2020

Summary


A new ransomware known as EvilQuest has been discovered by security researchers. This ransomware was first spotted to be impersonating the Google Software Update program, and on torrent sites, injected in installers wrapping pirated versions of popular macOS software such as Little Snitch, Ableton Live, and Mixed in key. EvilQuest ransomware is discovered to encrypt macOS systems, installs a keylogger and a reverse shell for full control over infected host, and exfiltrates files that contain valuable information (keys to cryptocurrency wallets, code-signing certificates, and many more) with a variety of extensions (eg .pdf, .doc, .jpg, .txt, .pages, .wallet, .zip, etc).

Description & Consequence


The EvilQuest ransomware is discovered to encrypt the user's files as soon as it's executed. Once the file encryption scheme ends, a popup is shown to the user, letting the victim know they've been infected and their files encrypted. Then the victim is directed to open a note in the form of a text file that has been placed on their desktop. After the encryption process ends, the ransomware installs keylogger to record all the user’s keystrokes, open a reverse shell on the target computer so that the attacker can continue to access it and steal sensitive information users enter with the keyboard.  Those capabilities could allow attackers "full control over an infected host. EvilQuest appears to be solely distributed through torrenting websites and pirated versions of macOS software. Researchers have found it also bundled in a package called Google Software Update, while others have seen it hidden in pirated versions of DJ app Mixed In Key, Ableton Live and security tool Little Snitch. The malware is also able to see whether a system is running in a virtual machine, whether there are security and antivirus solutions running on the system, and to implement several persistence tricks.

 

EvilQuest ransomware encrypts macOS systems, installs a keylogger and a reverse shell for full control over infected host, and also perform exfiltration of files that contain valuable information to steal sensitive information users.

Solution


The EvilQuest ransomware seems to be distributed through torrenting websites and pirated versions of macOS software. So if you stick to the Mac App Store or third-party developers that you trust, you should be able to avoid getting it. Furthermore, there are also two apps that can mitigate the risks of EvilQuest for macOS users:

  1. Wardle’s free and open-source Ransomwhere?  App can generically detect and stop ransomware on macOS
  2. The latest version of Malwarebytes can also detect and mitigate EvilQuest before it does any damage.

Reference


Revision


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