Discover how to intercept data stolen by cybercriminals via Telegram bots and learn to use it to clarify related threat landscape.
While analyzing malware samples uploaded to ANY.RUN’s Interactive Sandbox, one particular case marked as “phishing” and “Telegram” drew the attention of our security analysts.
Although this analysis session wasn’t attributed to any known malware family or threat actor group, the analysis revealed that Telegram bots were being used for data exfiltration. This led us to apply a message interception technique for Telegram bots, previously described on the ANY.RUN blog.
The investigation resulted in a clear and practical case study demonstrating how intercepting Telegram bot communications can aid in profiling the threat actor behind a relatively obscure phishing campaign.
Key outcomes of this analysis include:
Examination and technical analysis of a lesser known phishing campaign
Demonstration of Telegram API-based data interception techniques
Collection of threat intelligence (TI) indicators to help identify the actor
Recommendations for detecting this type of threat
Not only that but someone, having spotted this reoccurring hallucination, had turned that made-up dependency into a real one, which was subsequently downloaded and installed thousands of times by developers as a result of the AI's bad advice, we've learned. If the package was laced with actual malware, rather than being a benign test, the results could have been disastrous.
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