The Tetrade: Brazilian banking malware goes global

The Tetrade: Brazilian banking malware goes global

Introduction


Brazil is a well-known country with plenty of banking trojans developed by local crooks. The Brazilian criminal underground is home to some of the world’s busiest and most creative perpetrators of cybercrime. Like their counterparts’ in China and Russia, their cyberattacks have a strong local flavor, and for a long time, they limited their attacks to the customers of local banks. But the time has come when they aggressively expand their attacks and operations abroad, targeting other countries and banks. The Tetrade is our designation for four large banking trojan families created, developed and spread by Brazilian crooks, but now on a global level.


Although this is not their first attempt – they tried, timidly, in 2011, using very basic trojans, with a low success rate – now the situation is completely different. Brazilian banking trojans have evolved greatly, with hackers adopting techniques for bypassing detection, creating highly modular and obfuscated malware, and using a very complex execution flow, which makes analysis a painful, tricky process.


At least since the year 2000, Brazilian banks have operated in a very hostile online environment full of fraud. Despite their early adoption of technologies aimed at protecting the customer, and deployment of plugins, tokens, e-tokens, two-factor authentication, CHIP and PIN credit cards, and other ways to safeguard their millions of clients, fraud is still ramping up, as the country still lacks proper legislation for punishing cybercriminals.


This article is a deep dive intended for a complete understanding of these four banking trojan families: Guildma, Javali, Melcoz and Grandoreiro, as they expand abroad, targeting users not just in Brazil, but in the wider Latin America and Europe.


These crooks are prep ..

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