Malware News Cerber Ransomware Creates Self-Inflicted Canary Vaccine

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The old canary-in-the-coal-mine and the new canary file serve the same purpose. Both are threat detectors: the former to detect the presence of poisonous gas in a mine, and the latter to detect an unauthorized presence in a file system. The canary file is particularly useful as an early-warning system for the presence of ransomware.

The concept is very simple. A bogus file designed to look like a prime ransomware target is strategically placed and watched by an anti-ransomware application. There is no valid reason for this file to be encrypted. If the watching anti-ransomware detects any attempt to do so, it knows that ransomware is present and can take the necessary action.

Cybereason researchers have discovered that the Cerber ransomware now includes a new feature to avoid triggering canary files. "To avoid encrypting canary files and triggering antiransomware programs," reports Uri Sternfield, Cybereason's lead researcher, "a new feature in Cerber now searches computers for any image file (.png, .bmp, .tiff, .jpg, etc.) and checks whether they are valid. Image files are commonly used as canary files. If a malformed image is found, Cerber skips the entire directory in which it is located and does not encrypt it."

Read full article: Cerber Ransomware Creates Self-Inflicted Canary Vaccine | SecurityWeek.Com
 

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