Search This Blog

Powered by Blogger.

Blog Archive

Labels

Watch Out For This Raccoon Stealer 2.0 With New Capabilities

If you have this trojan installed on your system it might lead to various cyber issues, read the full story.

Raccoon Stealer also named Legion, Mohazo, and Racealer, a high-risk trojan-type application that attacks the system and steals personal credentials is back with a second upgraded version circulating on cybercrime forums, offering hackers elevated password-stealing functionality and advanced operational capacity. 

The trojan whose services are being offered by various hacker groups on hacker forums, when installed on one's system can lead to various cyber issues. 

The Raccoon Stealer operation was taken down in march 2022 when its operators reported that one of the lead developers of the forum was killed during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Also, the team promised its come back with a second upgraded version with more capabilities. 

“We expect a resurgence of Raccoon Stealer v2, as developers implemented a version tailored to the needs of cybercriminals (efficiency, performance, stealing capabilities, etc.) and scaled their backbone servers to handle large loads,” Sekoia told in the report. 

According to the malware developers, the upgraded Raccoon version was built from scratch using C/C++, featuring a new back-end, front-end, and code to steal credentials and other data. 

Raccoon Stealer 2.0 uses a fake Malwarebytes website to steal personal information including Basic system fingerprinting info, browser passwords, cookies, autofill data, saved credit cards, browser passwords, cookies, and autofill data, and saved credit cards. 

Other information that Raccoon Stealer steals is given below:

• Cryptocurrency wallets and web browser extensions including MetaMask, TronLink, BinanceChain, and Ronin
• Exodus, Atomic, JaxxLiberty, Binance, Coinomi, Electrum, Electrum-LTC, and ElectronCash
• Individual files located on all disks
• Screenshot capturing
• Installed applications list

The data can be misused in various ways, such as transferring users' funds in crypto-wallets and other accounts (e.g., PayPal, bank accounts, etc.). Victims could, therefore, lose their savings. Moreover, hijacked accounts (e.g., Facebook, emails, etc.) can be misused to borrow money. 

The subscription cost of the Stealer which has already attacked over 100,000 devices, is $200 per month. It has become one of the most named viruses on the underground forums in 2019. 
Share it:

cyber attack

Cyber Threats

Data Stolen

malware

online theft

Raccoon Stealer 2.0