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Agent Tesla Delivered via Fake Canon EOS Notification on Free OwnCloud Account

Published: 2020-03-11. Last Updated: 2020-03-11 09:06:48 UTC
by Xavier Mertens (Version: 1)
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For a few days, there are new waves of Agent Tesla[1] landing in our mailboxes. I found one that uses two new "channels" to deliver the trojan. Today, we can potentially receive notifications and files from many types of systems or devices. I found a phishing sample that tries to hide behind a Canon EOS camera notification. Not very well designed but it’s uncommon to see this. It started with a simple email:

Note the beautiful typo in the mail subject! ("Qoute")

The malicious payload is delivered via the following path:

A ZIP archive is attached to the mail:

Photos and specification.zip (SHA256:0875804511b077f7e8b4d5f4dd11b61f2334b9b61da1018f6246739a348a6d19)

The archive contains an HTML file (Unicode): 

photos and specification.html (SHA256:ab6b5faa826f5f503d9b9c8c5de0e3b0d65bf88812a9f7b83bf97901c39d6ebe)

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
<HTML><HEAD>
<META name=GENERATOR content="MSHTML 11.00.9600.19626"></HEAD>
<BODY style="MARGIN: 0.5em">
<P><A href="hxxps://nuesterish742[.]owncloud[.]online/index.php/s/rEbK2f0fHiMTy2k"><IMG style="HEIGHT: 368px; WIDTH: 661px" border=0 hspace=0 alt="" src="hxxps://www[.]mirrorlessrumors[.]com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Bildschirmfoto-2018-09-02-um-07.29.06-700x368.png" width=699 align=baseline height=368></A><BR><BR><BR><FONT size=7><A href="hxxps://nuesterish742[.]owncloud[.]online/index.php/s/rEbK2f0fHiMTy2k"><STRONG>DOWNLOAD</STRONG></A><STRONG>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</STRONG>
<A href="hxxps://nuesterish742[.]owncloud[.]online/index.php/s/rEbK2f0fHiMTy2k"><STRONG>VIEW</STRONG></A><BR><A href="hxxps://nuesterish742[.]owncloud[.]online/index.php/s/rEbK2f0fHiMTy2k"><FONT size=3>hxxps://nuesterish742[.]owncloud[.]online/index.php/s/rEbK2f0fHiMTy2k</FONT></A><BR><BR></FONT></P></BODY></HTML>

Here is the page rendered in a browser:

The next stage payload is hosted on a public OwnCloud account. OwnCloud is a very popular cloud storage solution. You can run your private cloud on-premises but they also offer a “cloud” solution and a free trial:

A file is shared via this trial account: “Photos and specification.cab” (SHA256:d6404503a8257ebf3d153e91d0b92c9ae8da7c710124781ae27e6a55c40b887f). It contains the final payload:

Photos and specification.exe (SHA256:5254a36f51199786127851940e49c50ffe04aafa091ba6518118125bd68a4c31) with a current VT score of 24/72[2]. This is the Agent Tesla itself.

It copies itself into C:\Users\admin\AppData\Roaming\ and implements persistence via a scheduled task:

C:\Windows\System32\schtasks.exe" /Create /TN "Updates\PHIvtqf" /XML "C:\Users\user\AppData\Local\Temp\tmp6CEB.tmp

The scheduled task configuration is also dumped on disk:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-16"?>
<Task version="1.2" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/windows/2004/02/mit/task">
  <RegistrationInfo>
    <Date>2014-10-25T14:27:44.8929027</Date>
    <Author>SANDBOX\user</Author>
  </RegistrationInfo>
  <Triggers>
    <LogonTrigger>
      <Enabled>true</Enabled>
      <UserId>SANDBOX\user</UserId>
    </LogonTrigger>
    <RegistrationTrigger>
      <Enabled>false</Enabled>
    </RegistrationTrigger>
  </Triggers>
  <Principals>
    <Principal id="Author">
      <UserId>SANDBOX\user</UserId>
      <LogonType>InteractiveToken</LogonType>
      <RunLevel>LeastPrivilege</RunLevel>
    </Principal>
  </Principals>
  <Settings>
    <MultipleInstancesPolicy>StopExisting</MultipleInstancesPolicy>
    <DisallowStartIfOnBatteries>false</DisallowStartIfOnBatteries>
    <StopIfGoingOnBatteries>true</StopIfGoingOnBatteries>
    <AllowHardTerminate>false</AllowHardTerminate>
    <StartWhenAvailable>true</StartWhenAvailable>
    <RunOnlyIfNetworkAvailable>false</RunOnlyIfNetworkAvailable>
    <IdleSettings>
      <StopOnIdleEnd>true</StopOnIdleEnd>
      <RestartOnIdle>false</RestartOnIdle>
    </IdleSettings>
    <AllowStartOnDemand>true</AllowStartOnDemand>
    <Enabled>true</Enabled>
    <Hidden>false</Hidden>
    <RunOnlyIfIdle>false</RunOnlyIfIdle>
    <WakeToRun>false</WakeToRun>
    <ExecutionTimeLimit>PT0S</ExecutionTimeLimit>
    <Priority>7</Priority>
  </Settings>
  <Actions Context="Author">
    <Exec>
      <Command>C:\Users\user\AppData\Roaming\PHIvtqf.exe</Command>
    </Exec>
  </Actions>
</Task>

You can detect hosts infected by Agent Tesla by checking connections over TCP/587 (SMTP submissions) which is usually permitted compared to TCP/25. In this case, it used the IP address %%ip:78.142.19.101% to exfiltrate data.

I also found other suspicious OwnCloud accounts:

nuesterish742.owncloud.online   
wighteredd264.owncloud.online
ntyclighta026.owncloud.online
idompoomel467.owncloud.online
titiollaug517.owncloud.online

Probably there are many more...

[1] https://any.run/malware-trends/agenttesla
[2] https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/5254a36f51199786127851940e49c50ffe04aafa091ba6518118125bd68a4c31/detection

Xavier Mertens (@xme)
Senior ISC Handler - Freelance Cyber Security Consultant
PGP Key

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