www.darkreading.com Open in urlscan Pro
2606:4700::6811:7663  Public Scan

URL: https://www.darkreading.com/endpoint/-operation-magalenha-attacks-window-brazil-cybercrime-ecosystem
Submission: On May 26 via api from TR — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

The Edge
DR Tech
Sections
Close
Back
Sections
Featured Sections
The Edge
Dark Reading Technology
Attacks / Breaches

Cloud

ICS/OT

Remote Workforce

Perimeter

Analytics
Security Monitoring

Security Monitoring
App Sec
Database Security

Database Security
Risk
Compliance

Compliance
Threat Intelligence

Endpoint
AuthenticationMobile SecurityPrivacy

AuthenticationMobile SecurityPrivacy
Vulnerabilities / Threats
Advanced ThreatsInsider ThreatsVulnerability Management

Advanced ThreatsInsider ThreatsVulnerability Management
Operations
Identity & Access ManagementCareers & People

Identity & Access ManagementCareers & People
Physical Security

IoT

DR Global
Middle East & Africa

Middle East & Africa
Black Hat news
Omdia Research
Security Now
Events
Close
Back
Events
Events
 * SecTor - Canada's IT Security Conference Oct 23-26 - Learn More
   
 * Anatomy of a Data Breach - A Dark Reading June 22 Event
   

Webinars
 * Securing the Remote Worker: How to Monitor and Mitigate Offsite Cyberattacks
   May 30, 2023
 * Next-Generation Supply Chain Security
   Jun 07, 2023

Resources
Close
Back
Resources
Dark Reading Library >
Webinars >
Reports >
Slideshows >
White Papers >
Partner Perspectives: Microsoft
Tech Library >

Newsletter Sign-Up

The Edge
DR Tech
Sections
Close
Back
Sections
Featured Sections
The Edge
Dark Reading Technology
Attacks / Breaches

Cloud

ICS/OT

Remote Workforce

Perimeter

Analytics
Security Monitoring

Security Monitoring
App Sec
Database Security

Database Security
Risk
Compliance

Compliance
Threat Intelligence

Endpoint
AuthenticationMobile SecurityPrivacy

AuthenticationMobile SecurityPrivacy
Vulnerabilities / Threats
Advanced ThreatsInsider ThreatsVulnerability Management

Advanced ThreatsInsider ThreatsVulnerability Management
Operations
Identity & Access ManagementCareers & People

Identity & Access ManagementCareers & People
Physical Security

IoT

DR Global
Middle East & Africa

Middle East & Africa
Black Hat news
Omdia Research
Security Now
Events
Close
Back
Events
Events
 * SecTor - Canada's IT Security Conference Oct 23-26 - Learn More
   
 * Anatomy of a Data Breach - A Dark Reading June 22 Event
   

Webinars
 * Securing the Remote Worker: How to Monitor and Mitigate Offsite Cyberattacks
   May 30, 2023
 * Next-Generation Supply Chain Security
   Jun 07, 2023

Resources
Close
Back
Resources
Dark Reading Library >
Webinars >
Reports >
Slideshows >
White Papers >
Partner Perspectives: Microsoft
Tech Library >
The Edge
DR Tech
Sections
Close
Back
Sections
Featured Sections
The Edge
Dark Reading Technology
Attacks / Breaches

Cloud

ICS/OT

Remote Workforce

Perimeter

Analytics
Security Monitoring

Security Monitoring
App Sec
Database Security

Database Security
Risk
Compliance

Compliance
Threat Intelligence

Endpoint
AuthenticationMobile SecurityPrivacy

AuthenticationMobile SecurityPrivacy
Vulnerabilities / Threats
Advanced ThreatsInsider ThreatsVulnerability Management

Advanced ThreatsInsider ThreatsVulnerability Management
Operations
Identity & Access ManagementCareers & People

Identity & Access ManagementCareers & People
Physical Security

IoT

DR Global
Middle East & Africa

Middle East & Africa
Black Hat news
Omdia Research
Security Now
Events
Close
Back
Events
Events
 * SecTor - Canada's IT Security Conference Oct 23-26 - Learn More
   
 * Anatomy of a Data Breach - A Dark Reading June 22 Event
   

Webinars
 * Securing the Remote Worker: How to Monitor and Mitigate Offsite Cyberattacks
   May 30, 2023
 * Next-Generation Supply Chain Security
   Jun 07, 2023

Resources
Close
Back
Resources
Dark Reading Library >
Webinars >
Reports >
Slideshows >
White Papers >
Partner Perspectives: Microsoft
Tech Library >

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Newsletter Sign-Up
SEARCH
A minimum of 3 characters are required to be typed in the search bar in order to
perform a search.




Announcements
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 

Event
How to Launch a Threat Hunting Program | Webinar <REGISTER>
Event
How to Accelerate XDR Outcomes: Bridging the Gap Between Network and Endpoint |
Webinar <REGISTER>
Report
Black Hat USA 2022 Attendee Report | Supply Chain & Cloud Security Risks Are Top
of Mind | <READ IT NOW>
PreviousNext

Endpoint

3 MIN READ

News



'OPERATION MAGALENHA' ATTACKS GIVE A WINDOW INTO BRAZIL'S CYBERCRIME ECOSYSTEM

A campaign against customers of Portuguese banks uses a capable financial
malware strain dubbed PeepingTitle, written in the Delphi programming language.
Nate Nelson
Contributing Writer, Dark Reading
May 25, 2023
Source: Lazyllama via Alamy Stock Photo
PDF


Earlier this year, threat actors carried out a campaign to steal the personal
and financial information of customers of Portuguese banks, including private
and government and institutions.



Researchers from SentinelLabs branded it "Operation Magalenha," in a report
published the morning of May 25. Magalenha is notable both for its payload,
"PeepingTitle" — a multifunctional backdoor written in the Delphi programming
language — and its scattershot approach to cyber espionage.

The researchers assessed "with high confidence" that Magalenha's perpetrators
were Brazilian, as evidenced by their use of Brazilian-style Portuguese in their
code, as well as PeepingTitle's overlaps with the Brazilian Maxtrilha malware
family.

Altogether, the campaign provides a window into the ecosystem of cybercrime in
Brazil today.



"That region is generally underreported or missed throughout the security
industry," says Tom Hegel, senior threat researcher at SentinelOne, "but there's
a lot going on. It's a very messy ecosystem of threat actors."




CYBERCRIME OPERATION MAGALENHA

Operation Magalenha was indiscriminate in its first phase, utilizing phishing
emails, malicious websites with fake app installers, and related forms of social
engineering in order to lure in targets. Infection then began when targets
unwittingly executed a malicious Visual Basic script.

The script did triple duty. On one hand, it opened login pages for Energias de
Portugal and the Portuguese Tax and Customs Authority, with the purpose of
drawing attention away from its second function: dropping a malware loader. If a
victim actually entered their Energias or Customs credentials — in the latter's
case, often government-issued credentials — the program harvested them for
future use.

Next, the malware loader would download PeepingTitle, an info-stealing backdoor
written in Delphi. Delphi is a general purpose programming language that one
rarely hears much about in cyber circles up north.



"It's funny you mention that," Hegel says, when the topic comes up. "When we
first started looking into this campaign, knowing it was linked to Brazil, we
were immediately like: It's probably Delphi." There isn't any identifiable
technical reason for Delphi's relatively localized popularity, Hegel thinks. "A
lot of it's just because of the way that education is done there, because
everyone out in that region tends to know it."

The Delphi-driven PeepingTitle works by tracking the websites a victim has
visited. If someone visited a domain belonging to a Portuguese financial
institution, the malware awakens: connecting to a C2 server, taking screenshots,
exfiltrating data, and potentially staging further malware.

In general, Hegel says, "it's on par with what you expect of a normal financial
malware. It purely focuses on being able to get this data outbound and limit
detection as much as possible."

That said, Magalenha targeted both personal and financial data from individuals
and institutions alike in the government and private sectors. "So there's more
than just your regular financial theft — there are clues to ulterior objectives
that they may be pursuing, like initial access brokering," Hegel adds.


PEEPINGTITLE: A MALWARE IN FLUX

Also notable about PeepingTitle is that it comes in two variants. But the
variants have hardly any meaningful difference between them, besides the fact
that one captured a victim's browser window, while the other captured the entire
screen. Hegel thinks "it may indicate that the attackers evolved to add second
capabilities later on, or it's just purely experimentation."

"I think this points to the fact that it's not extremely well planned out," he
adds.

Besides the alike variants, he points to other evidence of the hackers' lack of
discipline, like their experimentation with different infrastructure — swapping
American provider DigitalOcean for a more lax Russian service, TimeWeb, for
instance — and the relatively unfocused nature of their information stealing.

"If this was somebody more capable," Hegel concludes, "they might go through the
process of thinking about what they want to connect to and steal, and do it in a
single package rather than multiple packages, which increases the potential of
getting caught. Instead, there's just a lot of experimenting, a lot of playing,
and not a lot of deep, strategic planning."

Vulnerabilities/ThreatsThreat IntelligenceApplication Security
Keep up with the latest cybersecurity threats, newly-discovered vulnerabilities,
data breach information, and emerging trends. Delivered daily or weekly right to
your email inbox.
Subscribe

More Insights
White Papers
 * 
   The Ultimate Guide to the CISSP
 * 
   Welcome to Modern Web App Security

More White Papers
Webinars
 * 
   Securing the Remote Worker: How to Monitor and Mitigate Offsite Cyberattacks
 * 
   Next-Generation Supply Chain Security

More Webinars
Reports
 * 
   Everything You Need to Know About DNS Attacks
 * 
   Securing the Remote Worker: How to Mitigate Off-Site Cyberattacks

More Reports

Editors' Choice
Bridgestone CISO: Lessons From Ransomware Attack Include Acting, Not Thinking
Jai Vijayan, Contributing Writer, Dark Reading
10 Types of AI Attacks CISOs Should Track
Ericka Chickowski, Contributing Writer, Dark Reading
Dark Reading Goes Global
Kelly Jackson Higgins 2, Editor-in-Chief, Dark Reading
3 Common Initial Attack Vectors Account for Most Ransomware Campaigns
Robert Lemos, Contributing Writer, Dark Reading
Webinars
 * Securing the Remote Worker: How to Monitor and Mitigate Offsite Cyberattacks
 * Next-Generation Supply Chain Security
 * Here's What Zero Trust Really Means
 * Mastering Endpoint Security: The Power of Least Privilege
 * Secrets to a Successful Managed Security Service Provider Relationship

More Webinars
Reports
 * Everything You Need to Know About DNS Attacks
 * Securing the Remote Worker: How to Mitigate Off-Site Cyberattacks
 * Successfully Managing Identity in Modern Cloud and Hybrid Environments
 * The 10 Most Impactful Types of Vulnerabilities for Enterprises Today
 * The Promise and Reality of Cloud Security

More Reports

White Papers
 * The Ultimate Guide to the CISSP
 * Welcome to Modern Web App Security
 * The State of Cybersecurity: 2023 Trends Report
 * The Cloud Security Workflow Handbook
 * Cybersecurity in a post pandemic world: A focus on financial services

More White Papers
Events
 * SecTor - Canada's IT Security Conference Oct 23-26 - Learn More
 * Anatomy of a Data Breach - A Dark Reading June 22 Event
 * Black Hat USA - August 5-10 - Learn More

More Events
More Insights
White Papers
 * 
   The Ultimate Guide to the CISSP
 * 
   Welcome to Modern Web App Security

More White Papers
Webinars
 * 
   Securing the Remote Worker: How to Monitor and Mitigate Offsite Cyberattacks
 * 
   Next-Generation Supply Chain Security

More Webinars
Reports
 * 
   Everything You Need to Know About DNS Attacks
 * 
   Securing the Remote Worker: How to Mitigate Off-Site Cyberattacks

More Reports

DISCOVER MORE FROM INFORMA TECH

 * Interop
 * InformationWeek
 * Network Computing
 * ITPro Today

 * Data Center Knowledge
 * Black Hat
 * Omdia

WORKING WITH US

 * About Us
 * Advertise
 * Reprints

FOLLOW DARK READING ON SOCIAL

 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 


 * Home
 * Cookies
 * Privacy
 * Terms



Copyright © 2023 Informa PLC Informa UK Limited is a company registered in
England and Wales with company number 1072954 whose registered office is 5
Howick Place, London, SW1P 1WG.





Cookies Button


ABOUT COOKIES ON THIS SITE

We and our partners use cookies to enhance your website experience, learn how
our site is used, offer personalised features, measure the effectiveness of our
services, and tailor content and ads to your interests while you navigate on the
web or interact with us across devices. You can choose to accept all of these
cookies or only essential cookies. To learn more or manage your preferences,
click “Settings”. For further information about the data we collect from you,
please see our Privacy Policy

Accept All
Settings



COOKIE PREFERENCE CENTER

When you visit any website, it may store or retrieve information on your
browser, mostly in the form of cookies. This information might be about you,
your preferences or your device and is mostly used to make the site work as you
expect it to. The information does not usually directly identify you, but it can
give you a more personalized web experience. Because we respect your right to
privacy, you can choose not to allow some types of cookies. Click on the
different category headings to find out more and change our default settings.
However, blocking some types of cookies may impact your experience of the site
and the services we are able to offer.
More information
Allow All


MANAGE CONSENT PREFERENCES

STRICTLY NECESSARY COOKIES

Always Active

These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched
off in our systems. They are usually only set in response to actions made by you
which amount to a request for services, such as setting your privacy
preferences, logging in or filling in forms.    You can set your browser to
block or alert you about these cookies, but some parts of the site will not then
work. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable information.

Cookies Details‎

PERFORMANCE COOKIES

Performance Cookies

These cookies allow us to count visits and traffic sources so we can measure and
improve the performance of our site. They help us to know which pages are the
most and least popular and see how visitors move around the site.    All
information these cookies collect is aggregated and therefore anonymous. If you
do not allow these cookies we will not know when you have visited our site, and
will not be able to monitor its performance.

Cookies Details‎

FUNCTIONAL COOKIES

Functional Cookies

These cookies enable the website to provide enhanced functionality and
personalisation. They may be set by us or by third party providers whose
services we have added to our pages.    If you do not allow these cookies then
some or all of these services may not function properly.

Cookies Details‎

TARGETING COOKIES

Targeting Cookies

These cookies may be set through our site by our advertising partners. They may
be used by those companies to build a profile of your interests and show you
relevant adverts on other sites.    They do not store directly personal
information, but are based on uniquely identifying your browser and internet
device. If you do not allow these cookies, you will experience less targeted
advertising.

Cookies Details‎
Back Button


BACK



Search Icon
Filter Icon

Clear
checkbox label label
Apply Cancel
Consent Leg.Interest
checkbox label label
checkbox label label
checkbox label label

 * 
   
   View Cookies
   
    * Name
      cookie name

Confirm My Choices