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A New Malicious Campaign Whip Around $60,000 of Bitcoin

$60K stolen by bitcoin malware using clipboard modification method.



July 2018, saw the reports of a recently discovered malicious campaign by the Fortiguard Labs. The campaign "Bitcoin Stealer" is as of now held responsible of stealing roughly $60,000 worth in Bitcoin.

The researchers from the FortiGuard Labs initially ran over a threat that at first coordinated a few tenets particular to the Jigsaw ransom ware back in April 2018, yet later on after a considerably more critical look it was revealed that the threat, which contained the assembly name "BitcoinStealer.exe," did not figure like a ransom ware at all.

As unlike to ransom ware, the Bitcoin Stealer rather used an executable to screen the contaminated PC's clipboard content for indications of a bitcoin address. When it finds one of these addresses, the malware at that point replaces that replicated bitcoin address with an alternate one containing similar strings at both the start and the end of that wallet address.

By using this technique, the malware basically mixes itself specifically into bitcoin transactions and after that, halfwit users into transferring cryptocurrency to the wallet of the cybercriminal utilizing Bitcoin Stealer.

As indicated by Techopedia, these stealing programs are cases of clipboard hijacking, an attack strategy through which attackers generally change clipboard content to guide browser users to a malignant website.The Programmers however, are additionally known to utilize a strategy called "pastejacking" to meddle with commands replicated from a web browser and paste into the terminal.

The question though that arises now is thusly aimed at the security specialists with respect to whether there will be sufficient insurance given against such episodes of clipboard modification attacks as digital attackers indeed have a long history of targeting clipboards in order to steal cryptocurrency or redirect users to malware.

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