BLACK FRIDAY: 2-for-1 offer NOVEMBER 20 - 26 See details
22
Global rank
47 infographic chevron month
Month rank
62 infographic chevron week
Week rank
0
IOCs

Qbot is a banking Trojan — a malware designed to collect banking information from victims. Qbot targets organizations mostly in the US. It is equipped with various sophisticated evasion and info-stealing functions and worm-like functionality, and a strong persistence mechanism.

Botnet
Type
Unknown
Origin
1 January, 2009
First seen
12 October, 2024
Last seen
Also known as
Pinkslipbot
QakBot
Quakbot

How to analyze Qbot with ANY.RUN

Type
Unknown
Origin
1 January, 2009
First seen
12 October, 2024
Last seen

IOCs

IP addresses
100.38.123.22
173.79.220.156
71.77.231.251
68.174.15.223
50.247.230.33
70.174.3.241
69.92.54.95
76.170.77.99
72.29.181.77
47.153.115.154
207.162.184.228
96.37.137.42
216.163.4.91
47.146.169.85
66.26.160.37
75.183.171.155
76.187.8.160
75.81.25.223
173.22.120.11
184.180.157.203
Hashes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40chorr.com
www.hospitaisipiranga.com.br
whichworx.com
idealcuisine.com.tn
Last Seen at
Last Seen at

Recent blog posts

post image
Private AI Assistant for Malware Analysis in...
watchers 925
comments 0
post image
5 Characteristics of Good Threat Intelligence...
watchers 467
comments 0
post image
New PhantomLoader Malware Distributes SSLoad:...
watchers 4027
comments 0

What is Qbot?

Qbot, also known as QakBot, Pinkslipbot, and Quakbot, is a banking trojan — malware designed to steal banking credentials, online banking session information, personal details of the victim, or any other banking data.

Although early versions of Qbot were spotted all the way back in 2009, its creators have maintained this trojan. Today, it continues to be active and features worm-like abilities to spread over networks, supports advanced web-injections techniques, and has a persistence mechanism that some researchers believe to be one of the best in its class. Additionally, the trojan has anti-VM, anti-debug and anti-sandbox functionally that makes research and analysis quite difficult.

Furthermore, Qbot is polymorphic, which means that it can change itself even after it is installed on an endpoint. The Trojan constantly modifies files, and the dropper that the newer version of Qbot continuously cycles through command and control servers.

The combination of these functions makes QakBot highly dangerous malware. Qbot has been used in several successful attacks on organizations and governmental structures and has infected tens of thousands of machines.

General description of QakBot malware

Qbot is dispatched in targeted attacks against businesses. With this trojan, the attackers go after bank accounts of organizations or private users who access their personal online banking cabinets from corporate networks by piggybacking into banking sessions of the victim.

The Trojan uses man-in-the-browser functionality to perform web injections, allowing it to alter what the victims see on the banking website when browsing from an infected machine. Interestingly, while most malware samples that use this technique contain the web injection code in their config file, Qbot can fetch the code from a controlled domain as it performs malicious activity.

Another trait that differentiates Qbot from other Trojans is its worm-like functionality. Qbot can copy itself using shared drives and spread over the network, spreading on its own or after receiving a command from the command and control server. Together with a highly developed persistence mechanism that uses registry runkeys and scheduled tasks, these traits make erasing Qbot from the infected network very difficult. The Trojan is designed to sustain itself despite system reboots and automatically launch itself when the system is turned on again.

This infamous persistence functionality has allegedly caused compromise of sensitive information in two government organizations in Massachusetts in 2011, while worm-like behavior helped the Qbot infiltrate thousands of machines and create a botnet with over 1,500 devices resulting from that attack.

Most of the targets that Qbot goes after are US-based organizations. Only about twenty percent of the new attack businesses are located outside of the United States. Although apart from the government offices, most of the attacks have been directed at banking, tech, and healthcare industries, there is no hard evidence to suggest that the attackers are aiming at specific fields. This means that businesses working in any industry can get hit by QakBot.

It is also important to note that an advanced cybergang operates the malware. Qbot attacks have been appearing on the radar of security researchers periodically, with phases of high activity and intervals when attacks would completely stop. This behavior is likely to avoid attracting too much attention from law enforcement and allows attackers to tweak and improve the malware during their time off.

The group behind Qbot is also notoriously known for pushing out new modified malware samples at astonishing rates. They repack and re-scramble the code daily, making malware identification by means of anti-virus software unreliable.

Unfortunately, people's identities behind Qbot are unknown, but it is widely believed that the cyber gang is based somewhere in Eastern Europe.

Qbot malware analysis

This video recorded in the ANY.RUN interactive malware hunting service shows the execution process of Qbot. You can also research other malware like Netwire and Predator the Thief.

qbot_process_graph

Figure 1: Displays the tree of processes created by the ANY.RUN interactive malware hunting service

QakBot execution process

Since Qbot is mostly targeted at the corporate sector, the main way of its penetration into infected systems is through a malicious document. In our example, maldoc starts several processes, including Powershell through by using a macro. Then, using cmd.exe, this trojan starts a chain of commands and executions, creating folders and temporary files. It utilizes Powershell to download the payload. Notably, the payload's name is as simple as six of the same digits or, less often, letters. Also, the payload often has a .png extension, although it is an executable file.

After that trojan starts its main execution, QakBot tries to evade detection by overwriting itself with the legitimate Windows executable calc.exe using the following commands: cmd.exe /c ping.exe -n 6 127.0.0.1 & type "C:\Windows\System32\calc.exe" > “Path to malware executable.” Qbot also injects explorer.exe and adds itself into autorun for persistence.

Qbot distribution

Qbot uses multiple attack vectors to infect victims. The malware uses email spam and phishing campaigns, as well as vulnerability exploits to infiltrate its targets. One of the more recent versions of the malware was observed being distributed by a dropper.

The dropper that installs Qbot is equipped with a delayed execution function. This means that after the dropper itself is downloaded onto a target machine, it waits around fifteen minutes before dropping the payload, likely in an effort to trick automatic sandboxes and avoid detection.

How to detect Qbot using ANY.RUN?

Sometimes Qbot trojan creates files that allow analysts to detect it with a high degree of certainty. To detect Qbot, open the "Files" tab in the lower part of the task's window and take a look at the created folders. If you see folders with names such as "Zulycjadyc" and "imtaykad" within C:\Users\admin\AppData\ Roaming\Microsoft\ directory and .exe or .dat file with a name "ytfovlym," as shown on the figure below, be sure that it is Qbot in front of you.

how_to_detect_qbot

Figure 2: Detecting Qbot by local files

Conclusion

Security researchers successfully reversed a sample of QakBot in a 2020 investigation. Since the researchers managed to pinpoint a command and control server, they could identify the true scale of the attack. What they uncovered was an active Qbot botnet consisting of over 2,000 computers.

If there was any doubt that Qbot is a severe threat, hopefully, this should clear it. Advanced web injections, sophisticated anti-evasion techniques, worm-like functions, and an experienced cyber gang that constantly updates the malware is a dangerous cocktail.

As security researchers, it is essential to analyze malware like Qbot since code obfuscation makes research complicated. Every investigation has the potential to uncover important data that will help businesses avoid attacks or identify and eradicate this Trojan quicker. At the same time, Qbot avoids dynamic analysis with some automatic sandboxes with the delayed execution of its dropper and other tricks, interactive sandboxes like the one presented by the ANY.RUN malware hunting services are not so easily fooled.

ANY.RUN presents a good opportunity to perform dynamic analysis on this malware from a secure online environment and share your findings with fellow researchers in our public malware database.

HAVE A LOOK AT

Adwind screenshot
Adwind
adwind trojan
Adwind RAT, sometimes also called Unrecom, Sockrat, Frutas, jRat, and JSocket, is a Malware As A Service Remote Access Trojan that attackers can use to collect information from infected machines. It was one of the most popular RATs in the market in 2015.
Read More
Agent Tesla screenshot
Agent Tesla
agenttesla trojan rat stealer
Agent Tesla is spyware that collects information about the actions of its victims by recording keystrokes and user interactions. It is falsely marketed as a legitimate software on the dedicated website where this malware is sold.
Read More
Amadey screenshot
Amadey
amadey
Amadey is a formidable Windows infostealer threat, characterized by its persistence mechanisms, modular design, and ability to execute various malicious tasks.
Read More
Arkei screenshot
Arkei
arkei stealer
Arkei is a stealer type malware capable of collecting passwords, autosaved forms, cryptocurrency wallet credentials, and files.
Read More
AsyncRAT screenshot
AsyncRAT
asyncrat
AsyncRAT is a RAT that can monitor and remotely control infected systems. This malware was introduced on Github as a legitimate open-source remote administration software, but hackers use it for its many powerful malicious functions.
Read More
WarZone screenshot
WarZone
warzone avemaria stealer trojan rat
WarZone RAT is a remote access trojan, which is written in C++ and offered as a malware-as-a-service. It packs a wide range of capabilities, from stealing victims’ files and passwords to capturing desktop activities. WarZone RAT is primarily distributed via phishing emails and receives regular updates from its C2.
Read More