Wednesday, 24 May 2017

Hajime malware is affecting the Internet of Things devices worldwide

Kaspersky Lab has published the results of its investigation into the activity of Hajime – a mysterious evolving Internet of Things (IoT) malware that builds a huge peer-to-peer botnet. The botnet has recently been propagating extensively, infecting multiple devices worldwide. To date, the network includes almost 300,000 malware-compromised devices, ready to work together, to perform the malware author’s instructions without their victims’ knowledge. Still, Hajime’s real purpose remains unknown.Related:Group Buy SEO Tools

Hajime, meaning ‘beginning’ in Japanese, showed its first signs of activity in October 2016. Since then, it has been evolving, developing new propagation techniques. The malware is building a huge peer-to-peer botnet – a decentralized group of compromised machines discreetly performing spam or DDoS attacks.Related:Group Buy SEO Tools

However, there is no attacking code or capability in Hajime – only a propagation module. Hajime, an advanced and stealthy family, uses different techniques – mainly brute-force attacks on device passwords – to infect devices, and then takes a number of steps to conceal itself from the compromised victim. Thus, the device becomes part of the botnet.
Hajime does not exclusively attack a specific type of device, but rather any device on the Internet. Nevertheless, malware authors are focusing their activities on some devices. Most of the targets have turned out to be Digital Video Recorders, followed by web-cameras and routers.Related:Groupbuy Ahrefs SEO Tools

According to Kaspersky Lab researchers, however, Hajime avoids several networks, including those of General Electric, Hewlett-Packard, the US Postal Service, the United States Department of Defense, and a number of private networks.

Infections had primarily come from Vietnam (over 20%), Taiwan (almost 13%) and Brazil (around 9%) at the time of research.

Distribution of Hajime infectors by country
Most of the compromised devices are located in Iran, Vietnam and Brazil. Special Offer:
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