Press Release
Emotet rockets into pole position as most seen malware family in Q1
HP Wolf Security’s latest Threat Insights Report highlights 27% jump in overall threats captured, including increases in script-based malware, HTML smuggling and persistent re-infection
May 12, 2022
PALO ALTO, Calif., May 12, 2022 – HP Inc. (NYSE: HPQ) today announced that the HP Wolf Security threat research team has identified a 27-fold increase in detections resulting from Emotet malicious spam campaigns in Q1 2022, compared to Q4 2021 – when Emotet first made its reappearance. The latest global HP Wolf Security Threat Insights Report – which provides analysis of real-world cybersecurity attacks – shows that Emotet has bolted up 36 places to become the most common malware family detected this quarter (representing 9% of all malware captured). One of these campaigns – which was targeted at Japanese organizations and involved email thread hijacking to trick recipients into infecting their PCs – was largely responsible for an 879% increase in .XLSM (Microsoft Excel) malware samples captured compared to the previous quarter.
By isolating threats that have evaded detection tools and made it to user endpoints, HP Wolf Security has specific insight into the latest techniques being used by cybercriminals. Notable examples include:
- Stealthy alternatives to malicious Microsoft Office documents growing popular, as macros start being phased out: As Microsoft has begun disabling macros, HP has seen a rise in non-Office-based formats, including malicious Java Archive files (+476%) and JavaScript files (+42%) compared to last quarter. Such attacks are harder for organizations to defend against because detection rates for these file types are often low, increasing the chance of infection.
- Signs indicate HTML smuggling on the rise: The median file size of HTML threats grew from 3KB to 12KB, suggesting a rise in the use of HTML smuggling, a technique where cybercriminals embed malware directly into HTML files to bypass email gateways and evade detection, before gaining access and stealing critical financial information. Recent campaigns were seen targeting Latin American and African banks.
- “Two for One” malware campaign leads to multiple RAT infections: A Visual Basic script attack was found being used to kick start a kill chain resulting in multiple infections on the same device, giving attackers persistent access to victims’ systems with VW0rm, NjRAT and AsyncRAT.
The findings are based on data from many millions of endpoints running HP Wolf Security. HP Wolf Security tracks malware by opening risky tasks in isolated, micro-virtual Machines (micro-VMs) to protect the user and understand and capture the full attempted infection chain, mitigating threats that have slipped past other security tools. To date, HP customers have clicked on over 18 billion email attachments, web pages, and downloads with no reported breaches. This data provides unique insights into how threat actors use malware in the wild.
Further key findings in the report include:
- 9% of threats hadn’t been seen before at the time they were isolated, with 14% of email malware isolated having bypassed at least one email gateway scanner.
- It took over 3 days (79 hours), on average, to be known by hash to other security tools.
- 45% of malware isolated by HP Wolf Security were Office file formats.
- Threats used 545 different malware families in their attempts to infect organizations, with Emotet, AgentTesla and Nemucod being the top three.
- A Microsoft Equation Editor exploit (CVE-2017-11882) accounted for 18% of all malicious samples captured.
- 69% of malware detected was delivered via email, while web downloads were responsible for 18%.
- The most common attachments used to deliver malware were spreadsheets (33%), executables and scripts (29%), archives (22%), and documents (11%).
- The most common phishing lures were business transactions such as “Order”, “Payment”, “Purchase”, “Request” and “Invoice”.
The HP Wolf Security team will discuss the Q1 2022 Threat Insights Report in a webinar briefing on June 7 at 8am PDT, you can find out more here.
About the data
This data was anonymously gathered within HP Wolf Security customer virtual machines from January-March 2022.
About HP Wolf Security
HP Wolf Security is a new breed[1] of endpoint security. HP’s portfolio of hardware-enforced security and endpoint-focused security services are designed to help organizations safeguard PCs, printers, and people from circling cyber predators. HP Wolf Security provides comprehensive endpoint protection and resiliency that starts at the hardware level and extends across software and services. Visit https://www.hp.com/uk-en/security/endpoint-security-solutions.html.
HP Security is now HP Wolf Security. Security features vary by platform, please see product data sheet for details.
Footnotes and disclaimers
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