November 2, 2011 By Amit Klein 2 min read

Cyber criminals have been busy developing webinjects for Zeus and SpyEye to orchestrate and develop malevolent attacks against certain brands. Webinjects are malware configuration directives that are used to inject rogue content into the Web pages of bank websites to steal confidential information from the institution’s customers. It’s not a contained problem, as IBM has discovered that these webinjects are being offered for sale on the online underground market.

The Underground Market: Come One, Come All

Investigations reveal that these shrewd developers are earning a decent income from selling the Zeus/SpyEye webinject services to an increasingly diverse customer base. The really interesting element is that they’re not too concerned whether the customer has the skills to use it. In fact, they’d probably prefer that they didn’t since the developers have gone to the trouble of obfuscating the Zeus/SpyEye webinjects not because they want to confuse malware researchers, but because they want to prevent the piracy of their software.

This means, ironically, that these criminals are actually taking steps to protect their own intellectual property — I suppose they have to do something since they can’t resort to litigation.

Because webinjects can’t be modified by customers, if they need localization for a specific country and language, this can only be carried out by the developers, who are only too willing to do so — for a price:

However, resale is rife. Those who have purchased a copy of webinject are openly reselling their version to anyone that wants to steal the same information from victims:

From the advertisements we’ve seen, there are multiple targets, including British, Canadian, American and German banks. The prospective customer can see a detailed description of the type of information that can be stolen from each brand, almost like ordering from a catalog.

[onespot-mobile-content]

Worryingly, the prices are pretty reasonable. According to the website advertisements:

  • One webinject pack…………………………………………………………60 WMZ/LR
  • U.K. webinject pack……………………………………………………….800 WMZ/LR
  • U.S. webinject pack……………………………………………………….740 WMZ/LR
  • Updating/modification of webinjects……………………………………..20 LR each

These prices are in WebMoney/Liberty Reserve units (1 WMZ/LR is equivalent to 1 USD).

On one of the forums, we even found an advertisement for the large pack of webinjects (19 MB) being sold for just $15-20:

Anyone with malevolent intentions and a bit of spare cash can bag themselves a bargain on the underground market — you’ve been warned.

View on-demand webinar: Cybercriminals Never Sleep

More from Threat Intelligence

FYSA – Adobe Cold Fusion Path Traversal Vulnerability

2 min read - Summary Adobe has released a security bulletin (APSB24-107) addressing an arbitrary file system read vulnerability in ColdFusion, a web application server. The vulnerability, identified as CVE-2024-53961, can be exploited to read arbitrary files on the system, potentially leading to unauthorized access and data exposure. Threat Topography Threat Type: Arbitrary File System Read Industries Impacted: Technology, Software, and Web Development Geolocation: Global Environment Impact: Web servers running ColdFusion 2021 and 2023 are vulnerable Overview X-Force Incident Command is monitoring the disclosure…

Strela Stealer: Today’s invoice is tomorrow’s phish

12 min read - As of November 2024, IBM X-Force has tracked ongoing Hive0145 campaigns delivering Strela Stealer malware to victims throughout Europe - primarily Spain, Germany and Ukraine. The phishing emails used in these campaigns are real invoice notifications, which have been stolen through previously exfiltrated email credentials. Strela Stealer is designed to extract user credentials stored in Microsoft Outlook and Mozilla Thunderbird. During the past 18 months, the group tested various techniques to enhance its operation's effectiveness. Hive0145 is likely to be…

Hive0147 serving juicy Picanha with a side of Mekotio

17 min read - IBM X-Force tracks multiple threat actors operating within the flourishing Latin American (LATAM) threat landscape. X-Force has observed Hive0147 to be one of the most active threat groups operating in the region, targeting employee inboxes at scale, with a primary focus on phishing and malware distribution. After a 3-month break, Hive0147 returned in July with even larger campaign volumes, and the debut of a new malicious downloader X-Force named "Picanha,” likely under continued development, deploying the Mekotio banking trojan. Hive0147…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today