On a bi-weekly basis, FortiGuard Labs gathers data on ransomware variants of interest that have been gaining traction within our datasets and the OSINT community. The Ransomware Roundup report aims to provide readers with brief insights into the evolving ransomware landscape and the Fortinet solutions that protect against those variants.
This edition of the Ransomware Roundup covers the RA World ransomware.
Affected platforms: Microsoft Windows
Impacted parties: Microsoft Windows Users
Impact: Steals and encrypts victims' files and demands ransom for file decryption and not releasing the stolen data.
Severity level: High
The RA World ransomware was first submitted to a publicly available file scanning service in early December 2023. The threat actor steals victims' data before deploying and running its ransomware malware for file encryption. The group operates both TOR and non-TOR sites where victims' stolen data has been leaked.
The ransomware is also designed to delete Volume Shadow Copies and system backups to inhibit system recovery.
Information on the infection vector used by the RA World ransomware threat actor is unavailable. However, it is not likely to differ significantly from other ransomware groups.
The RA World ransomware samples were submitted to a publicly available file scanning service from the Netherlands, France, the United Kingdom, the Czech Republic, Poland, Colombia, and Japan.
The ransomware's data leak sites list 23 victims at the time of this writing. The listed victims are located in Germany, the UK, the US, Italy, Poland, India, Taiwan, Mexico, France, Thailand, and Korea.
The first available RA World sample (SHA2: 4866d6994c2f8b4dadfaabc2e2b81bd86c12f68fdf0da13d41d7b0e30bea0801) performs the following actions:
It stops the following services:
vss |
svc$ |
memtas |
sophos |
veeam |
backup |
mepocs |
GxVss |
GxBlr |
GxFWD |
GxCVD |
GxCIMgr |
DefWatch |
ccEvtMgr |
ccSetMgr |
SavRoam |
RTVscan |
QBFCService |
QBIDPService |
Intuit.QuickBooks.FCS |
QBCFMonitorService |
YooBackup |
YooIT |
zhudongfangyu |
stc_raw_agent |
VSNAPVSS |
VeeamTransportSvc |
VeeamDeploymentService |
VeeamNFSSvc |
PDVFSService |
BackupExecVSSProvider |
BackupExecAgentAccelerator |
BackupExecAgentBrowser |
BackupExecDiveciMediaService |
BackupExecJobEngine |
BackupExecManagementService |
BackupExecRPCService |
AcrSch2Svc |
AcronisAgent |
CASAD2DWebSvc |
CAARCUpdateSvc |
It terminates the following processes:
sql.exe |
oracle.exe |
ocssd.exe |
dbsnmp.exe |
synctime.exe |
agntsvc.exe |
isqlplussvc.exe |
xfssvccon.exe |
mydesktopservice.exe |
ocautoupds.exe |
encsvc.exe |
firefox.exe |
tbirdconfig.exe |
mydesktopqos.exe |
ocomm.exe |
dbeng50.exe |
sqbcoreservice.exe |
excel.exe |
infopath.exe |
msaccess.exe |
mspub.exe |
onenote.exe |
outlook.exe |
powerpnt.exe |
steam.exe |
thebat.exe |
thunderbird.exe |
visio.exe |
winword.exe |
wordpad.exe |
notepad.exe |
The ransomware uses the following commands to delete Volume Shadow Copies:
The malware encrypts files on the victims’ machines and adds the following extension to the encrypted files:
It then drops the ransom note “Data breach warning.txt,“ which includes the following information:
The ransomware excludes the following filetypes from file encryption:
.exe |
.dll |
.RAWLD |
.iso |
.msi |
.bin |
It excludes the following files and folders from file encryption:
AppData |
Boot |
Windows |
SYSVOL |
Tor Browser |
Internet Explorer |
Opera |
|
Opera Software |
Mozilla |
Mozilla Firefox |
$Recycle.Bin |
ProgramData |
All Users |
autorun.inf |
boot.ini |
bootfont.bin |
bootsect.bak |
bootmgr |
bootmgr.efi |
bootmgfw.efi |
desktop.ini |
$windows.~ws |
system volume information |
intel |
msocache |
perflogs |
iconcache.db |
ntldr |
ntuser.dat |
ntuser.dat.log |
ntuser.ini |
thumbs.db |
Program Files |
Program Files (x86) |
#recycle |
config.msi |
$windows.~bt |
The ransomware uses the following specific mutex:
Based on this RA World ransomware sample, the following assumption can be made:
Note that the compilation time of the sample, although easily changed, is "Sat Nov 18 11:32:32 2023 GMT".
For example, another RA World ransomware sample (SHA2: 51da3acc6c7089bd0f1df9d9902e183db0d1342552404c3c1b898b168399b0bc) claims to have been compiled on Aug 24 17:56:57 2022 GMT, however this sample did not appear on the file scanning site until February 2, 2024. Its ransom note lists fewer unpaid victims, indicating that the sample was created after 4866d6994c2f8b4dadfaabc2e2b81bd86c12f68fdf0da13d41d7b0e30bea0801.
A minor variant of the RA World ransomware (SHA2: 9479a5dc61284ccc3f063ebb38da9f63400d8b25d8bca8d04b1832f02fac24de) became available at the end of January 2024.
This variant performs the identical actions as 4866d6994c2f8b4dadfaabc2e2b81bd86c12f68fdf0da13d41d7b0e30bea0801 except for the following:
A few days later, yet another minor RA World ransomware variant (SHA2: 31ac190b45cc32c04c2415761c7f152153e16750516df0ce0761ca28300dd6a4) became available.
This variant also performs the identical actions as the previously mentioned RA World ransomware samples except for the following:
As mentioned above, the RA World ransomware group operates both TOR and non-TOR sites to publish stolen data.
The site includes the following statement, which provides a clue to the group's location:
War is death’s feast.
I survived, but my friend didn’t.
The RA World ransomware described in this report are detected and blocked by FortiGuard Antivirus as:
FortiGate, FortiMail, FortiClient, and FortiEDR support the FortiGuard AntiVirus service. The FortiGuard AntiVirus engine is a part of each of those solutions. As a result, customers who have these products with up-to-date protections are protected.
RA World Ransomware File IOCs
SHA2 |
Note |
4866d6994c2f8b4dadfaabc2e2b81bd86c12f68fdf0da13d41d7b0e30bea0801 |
RA World ransomware |
51da3acc6c7089bd0f1df9d9902e183db0d1342552404c3c1b898b168399b0bc |
|
31ac190b45cc32c04c2415761c7f152153e16750516df0ce0761ca28300dd6a4 |
|
9479a5dc61284ccc3f063ebb38da9f63400d8b25d8bca8d04b1832f02fac24de |
Due to the ease of disruption, damage to daily operations, potential impact on an organization’s reputation, and the unwanted destruction or release of personally identifiable information (PII), etc., it is vital to keep all AV and IPS signatures up to date.
Since the majority of ransomware is delivered via phishing, organizations should consider leveraging Fortinet solutions designed to train users to understand and detect phishing threats:
The FortiPhish Phishing Simulation Service uses real-world simulations to help organizations test user awareness and vigilance to phishing threats and to train and reinforce proper practices when users encounter targeted phishing attacks.
Our FREE Fortinet Certified Fundamentals (FCF) in Cybersecurity training. The training is designed to help end users learn about today's threat landscape and will introduce basic cybersecurity concepts and technology.
Organizations will need to make foundational changes to the frequency, location, and security of their data backups to effectively deal with the evolving and rapidly expanding risk of ransomware. When coupled with digital supply chain compromise and a workforce telecommuting into the network, there is a real risk that attacks can come from anywhere. Cloud-based security solutions, such as SASE, to protect off-network devices; advanced endpoint security, such as EDR (endpoint detection and response) solutions that can disrupt malware mid-attack; and Zero Trust Access and network segmentation strategies that restrict access to applications and resources based on policy and context, should all be investigated to minimize risk and to reduce the impact of a successful ransomware attack.
As part of the industry's leading fully integrated Security Fabric, delivering native synergy and automation across your security ecosystem, Fortinet also provides an extensive portfolio of technology and human-based as-a-service offerings. These services are powered by our global FortiGuard team of seasoned cybersecurity experts.
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Organizations such as CISA, NCSC, the FBI, and HHS caution ransomware victims against paying a ransom partly because the payment does not guarantee that files will be recovered. According to a US Department of Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) advisory, ransom payments may also embolden adversaries to target additional organizations, encourage other criminal actors to distribute ransomware, and/or fund illicit activities that could potentially be illegal. For organizations and individuals affected by ransomware, the FBI has a Ransomware Complaint page where victims can submit samples of ransomware activity via their Internet Crimes Complaint Center (IC3).
FortiGuard Labs’ Emergency Incident Response Service provides rapid and effective response when an incident is detected. Our Incident Readiness Subscription Service provides tools and guidance to help you better prepare for a cyber incident through readiness assessments, IR playbook development, and IR playbook testing (tabletop exercises).
Additionally, FortiRecon Digital Risk Protection (DRP) is a SaaS-based service that provides a view of what adversaries are seeing, doing, and planning to help you counter attacks at the reconnaissance phase and significantly reduce the risk, time, and cost of later-stage threat mitigation.