Sophos News

Christmas malware uses “Support Greta Thunberg” as a lure

SophosLabs has a seen a variety of Christmas-time spam campaigns that shamlessly hitch a ride on the coat-tails of climate activist Greta Thunberg.

The malware-spreading spams arrive with subject lines such as…

Please help save the planet
Greta
Friends help
Support Greta Thunberg - Time Person of the Year 2019
Greta Thunberg
the biggest demonstration
Demonstration 2019 

…and they urge you to join an upcoming demonstration.

The catch, however, is that the time and place of the alleged demonstration aren’t in the body of the email itself.

To find out more, you need to open a Word document that’s either linked to in the email, or attached to it:

MERRY CHRISTMAS

You can spend Christmas Eve looking for gifts for children. 
They will tell you Thank you only that day.

But the children will thank you all their lives if you come out 
for the biggest demonstration in protest against the inaction
of the government in connection with the climate crisis.

Support Greta Thunberg - Time Person of the Year 2019

I invite you. Time and address are attached in the attached file.

FORWARD this letter to all colleagues, friends and relatives 
RIGHT NOW, until you forget!

Many thanks.

As mentioned, some of the emails didn’t actually have an attached file; instead, they had a link at which you could download the file for yourself.

Fortunately, the links we’ve seen aren’t working at the moment, which means that even if you do click one of them you won’t be inviting malware onto your computer.

Unfortunately, of course, that means we can’t be sure what malware the crooks intended to foist on you, or what malware might suddenly appear at those links in the future.

Where we did receive a booby-trapped document, the process seemed to be geared towards delivering the Emotet malware onto your computer.

As you may know already, Emotet is a widespread malware family that seems to have evolved to fill a very specific cybercrime niche: delivering malware for other crooks.

As Naked Security’s Mark Stockley explained back in January 2019:

Over its five-year life [up to the end of 2018], Emotet has evolved from a Trojan that silently steals victims’ banking credentials into a highly sophisticated and widely deployed platform for distributing other kinds of malware, most notably other kinds of banking Trojan.

Emotet arrives on the back of malicious spam campaigns and serves up whatever malware pays. So far this year that’s meant TrickBot and QBot banking trojans, although it’s also been linked with BitPaymer – a strain of sophisticated ransomware that extorts six-figure payouts.

You have to imagine that the Emotet gang, who seem to have started life using malware to steal end users’ banking credentials, suddenly realised that they could make a living directly from other crooks by providing a malware distribution system…

…using their own malware – a sort of B2B content delivery network for other criminals.

What if you open it?

If you open one of these infected attachments, you will see what looks like an innocent-looking system warning, apparently from Word itself:

Don’t be fooled!

The “warning” is just an image inserted into the document by the crooks to trick you into bypassing Word’s default security settings of blocking active content, such as Word program macros (embedded software code), in the file.

You don’t need to use the [Enable content] button to load Word-format files created by alternative word-processing packages (or, for that matter to open documents from older versions of Word) – if the document is saved in a Word-compatible format then Word will open it; otherwise it won’t.

If you do [Enable content] then macro code inside the Word file will run a Powershell command that will go online to fetch whatever malware comes next – probably Emotet.

Remember that when malware arrives in a multi-step chain, like here, you can never be quite sure what comes next. That’s one reason the crooks like to deliver their final malware payloads via a web download that happens at the time and place that your infection started. That way they can tailor the final malware not only by time, but also by your geolocation and even by what type of computer you’ve got. For example, if your laptop turns out to be a Mac, some crooks will deliberately try to hit you with Mac-specific malware instead of sending you a Windows program that isn’t going to run at all.

What to do?

PS. Sophos Home is 100% free for Windows and Mac. The Premium version, with more features and cover for up to 10 computers (including friends and family), is half-price at the moment.