Malware Campaign Targets Telegram Desktop Application

Malware Campaign Targets Telegram Desktop Application

An independent security researcher based in Basel, Switzerland, Jannis Kirschner, began to look for the widely known Telegram desktop version on the internet on Sunday. The second Google result was an advertisement, which led him directly to malware cloaked as a Telegram for Windows desktop version. At first sight, it was sufficiently convincing for Kirschner to say that "almost fell for it myself." 

Malware vendors are habituated to use the same publicity tools that online businesses use to attract people. To stop such abuse, Google patrols its advertising ecosystem, but malware advertising is still an ongoing problem. Although a visit by telegramdesktop[dot]com to one of those sites now triggered an alert from the Google Safe Browsing service, that the two sites were unsafe and potentially still active and duplicated others. These include the telegraph[dot]net and the telegram[dot]org. The websites were reported to Google by Kirschner. 

Each of these three spoofed websites is Telegram's clones. All links on cloned sites are redirected to the legitimate Telegram domain, design.telegram.com. But one link is exchanged which is supposed to be the execution for the Telegram Desktop version of Windows. 

"A repo probably was a bad choice for delivering malware since it's very verbose (download numbers, time, and other documents)," Kirschner says. "The biggest opsec mistake was that they didn't clean one of the repo's metadata, which led me to discover commit messages and their e-mail [address]."

He further adds that "I believe that it is the same threat actor or group since the TTPs [tactics, techniques, and procedures] are the same, and all ..

Support the originator by clicking the read the rest link below.