- Apr 21, 2016
- 4,370
Two banks in Russia were hit by fileless malware that allowed attackers to get away with $800,000 in a single night. Had it not been for surveillance cameras, the banks wouldn't have even known something was amiss.
So how does this whole thing work? Well, this type of fileless malware uses the legitimate tools on the ATM machine so that no malware gets installed on the system. Alternatively, attackers use malware that resides only in the infected machines RAM, rather than on the hard drive. once it's gone, there's very little evidence it was even there.
During Kaspersky's Security Analyst Summit, the firm's principal security researcher Sergey Golavanov, delved into the attack that targeted two Russian banks.
With no malware evidence in its systems, the banks had CCTV recordings showing a culprit walking to the ATM and grabbing stacks of bills like it was the most natural thing in the world. About $100,000 worth of cash was taken from each machine and it took ...
Read more: Fileless Malware Attack on Russian Banks Helps Hackers Steal $800K
So how does this whole thing work? Well, this type of fileless malware uses the legitimate tools on the ATM machine so that no malware gets installed on the system. Alternatively, attackers use malware that resides only in the infected machines RAM, rather than on the hard drive. once it's gone, there's very little evidence it was even there.
During Kaspersky's Security Analyst Summit, the firm's principal security researcher Sergey Golavanov, delved into the attack that targeted two Russian banks.
With no malware evidence in its systems, the banks had CCTV recordings showing a culprit walking to the ATM and grabbing stacks of bills like it was the most natural thing in the world. About $100,000 worth of cash was taken from each machine and it took ...
Read more: Fileless Malware Attack on Russian Banks Helps Hackers Steal $800K
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