Name | Description |
---|---|
Geodo |
Domain | ID | Name | Use | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Enterprise | T1087 | .003 | Account Discovery: Email Account |
Emotet has been observed leveraging a module that can scrape email addresses from Outlook.[3][4] |
Enterprise | T1560 | Archive Collected Data |
Emotet has been observed encrypting the data it collects before sending it to the C2 server. [5] |
|
Enterprise | T1547 | .001 | Boot or Logon Autostart Execution: Registry Run Keys / Startup Folder |
Emotet has been observed adding the downloaded payload to the |
Enterprise | T1110 | .001 | Brute Force: Password Guessing |
Emotet has been observed using a hard coded list of passwords to brute force user accounts. [9][6][7][10][3] |
Enterprise | T1059 | .001 | Command and Scripting Interpreter: PowerShell |
Emotet has used Powershell to retrieve the malicious payload and download additional resources like Mimikatz. [6][2][8][11][12] |
.003 | Command and Scripting Interpreter: Windows Command Shell | |||
.005 | Command and Scripting Interpreter: Visual Basic |
Emotet has sent Microsoft Word documents with embedded macros that will invoke scripts to download additional payloads. [6][13][2][8][12] |
||
Enterprise | T1543 | .003 | Create or Modify System Process: Windows Service |
Emotet has been observed creating new services to maintain persistence. [7][10] |
Enterprise | T1555 | .003 | Credentials from Password Stores: Credentials from Web Browsers |
Emotet has been observed dropping browser password grabber modules. [2][4] |
Enterprise | T1114 | .001 | Email Collection: Local Email Collection |
Emotet has been observed leveraging a module that scrapes email data from Outlook.[3] |
Enterprise | T1573 | .002 | Encrypted Channel: Asymmetric Cryptography |
Emotet is known to use RSA keys for encrypting C2 traffic. [2] |
Enterprise | T1041 | Exfiltration Over C2 Channel |
Emotet has been seen exfiltrating system information stored within cookies sent within an HTTP GET request back to its C2 servers. [2] |
|
Enterprise | T1210 | Exploitation of Remote Services |
Emotet has been seen exploiting SMB via a vulnerability exploit like EternalBlue (MS17-010) to achieve lateral movement and propagation. [6][7][10][11] |
|
Enterprise | T1040 | Network Sniffing |
Emotet has been observed to hook network APIs to monitor network traffic. [1] |
|
Enterprise | T1571 | Non-Standard Port |
Emotet has used HTTP over ports such as 20, 22, 7080, and 50000, in addition to using ports commonly associated with HTTP/S.[13] |
|
Enterprise | T1027 | Obfuscated Files or Information |
Emotet has obfuscated macros within malicious documents to hide the URLs hosting the malware, CMD.exe arguments, and PowerShell scripts. [13][2][8][14] |
|
.002 | Software Packing | |||
Enterprise | T1003 | .001 | OS Credential Dumping: LSASS Memory |
Emotet has been observed dropping password grabber modules including Mimikatz. [2] |
Enterprise | T1566 | .001 | Phishing: Spearphishing Attachment |
Emotet has been delivered by phishing emails containing attachments. [15][9][6][7][13][2][8][12][4] |
.002 | Phishing: Spearphishing Link |
Emotet has been delivered by phishing emails containing links. [1][16][15][9][6][7][13][13][8] |
||
Enterprise | T1057 | Process Discovery | ||
Enterprise | T1055 | .001 | Process Injection: Dynamic-link Library Injection |
Emotet has been observed injecting in to Explorer.exe and other processes. [8][1][7] |
Enterprise | T1021 | .002 | Remote Services: SMB/Windows Admin Shares |
Emotet leverages the Admin$ share for lateral movement once the local admin password has been brute forced. [9] |
Enterprise | T1053 | .005 | Scheduled Task/Job: Scheduled Task |
Emotet has maintained persistence through a scheduled task. [7] |
Enterprise | T1552 | .001 | Unsecured Credentials: Credentials In Files |
Emotet has been observed leveraging a module that retrieves passwords stored on a system for the current logged-on user. [7][3] |
Enterprise | T1204 | .001 | User Execution: Malicious Link |
Emotet has relied upon users clicking on a malicious link delivered through spearphishing.[1][12] |
.002 | User Execution: Malicious File |
Emotet has relied upon users clicking on a malicious attachment delivered through spearphishing.[1][12][4] |
||
Enterprise | T1078 | .003 | Valid Accounts: Local Accounts |
Emotet can brute force a local admin password, then use it to facilitate lateral movement.[9] |
Enterprise | T1047 | Windows Management Instrumentation |
ID | Name | References |
---|---|---|
G0102 | Wizard Spider |