Skip to content

Secure IT

Stay Secure. Stay Informed.

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Sources
    • Krebs On Security
    • Security Week
    • The Hacker News
    • Schneier On Security
  • Home
  • The Hacker News
  • Russian Group EncryptHub Exploits MSC EvilTwin Vulnerability to Deploy Fickle Stealer Malware
  • The Hacker News

Russian Group EncryptHub Exploits MSC EvilTwin Vulnerability to Deploy Fickle Stealer Malware

[email protected] The Hacker News Published: August 16, 2025 | Updated: August 16, 2025 3 min read
0 views

Aug 16, 2025Ravie LakshmananMalware / Vulnerability

EncryptHub Exploits MSC EvilTwin Vulnerability

The threat actor known as EncryptHub is continuing to exploit a now-patched security flaw impacting Microsoft Windows to deliver malicious payloads.

Trustwave SpiderLabs said it recently observed an EncryptHub campaign that brings together social engineering and the exploitation of a vulnerability in the Microsoft Management Console (MMC) framework (CVE-2025-26633, aka MSC EvilTwin) to trigger the infection routine via a rogue Microsoft Console (MSC) file.

“These activities are part of a broad, ongoing wave of malicious activity that blends social engineering with technical exploitation to bypass security defenses and gain control over internal environments,” Trustwave researchers Nathaniel Morales and Nikita Kazymirskyi said.

EncryptHub, also tracked as LARVA-208 and Water Gamayun, is a Russian hacking group that first gained prominence in mid-2024. Operating at a high tempo, the financially motivated crew is known for leveraging several methods, including fake job offers, portfolio review, and even compromising Steam games, to infect targets with stealer malware.

Cybersecurity

The threat actor’s abuse of CVE-2025-26633 was previously documented by Trend Micro in March 2025, uncovering attacks that deliver two backdoors called SilentPrism and DarkWisp.

The latest attack sequence involves the threat actor claiming to be from the IT department and sending a Microsoft Teams request to the target with the goal of initiating a remote connection and deploying secondary payloads by means of PowerShell commands.

Among the files dropped are two MSC files with the same name, one benign and the other malicious, that’s used to trigger CVE-2025-26633, ultimately resulting in the execution of the rogue MSC file when its innocuous counterpart is launched.

The MSC file, for its part, fetches and executes from an external server another PowerShell script that collects system information, establishes persistence on the host, and communicates with an EncryptHub command-and-control (C2) server to receive and run malicious payloads, including a stealer called Fickle Stealer.

“The script receives AES-encrypted commands from the attacker, decrypts them, and runs the payloads directly on the infected machine,” the researchers said.

Also deployed by the threat actor over the course of the attack is a Go-based loader codenamed SilentCrystal, which abuses Brave Support, a legitimate platform associated with the Brave web browser, to host next-stage malware – a ZIP archive containing the two MSC files to weaponize CVE-2025-26633.

What makes this significant is that uploading file attachments on the Brave Support platform is restricted for new users, indicating that the attackers somehow managed to obtain unauthorized access to an account with upload permissions to pull off the scheme.

Some of the other tools deployed include a Golang backdoor that operates in both client and server mode to send system metadata to the C2 server, as well as set up C2 infrastructure by making use of the SOCKS5 proxy tunneling protocol.

There is also evidence that the threat actors are continuing to rely on videoconferencing lures, this time setting up phony platforms like RivaTalk to deceive victims into downloading an MSI installer.

Running the installer leads to the delivery of several files: the legitimate Early Launch Anti-Malware (ELAM) installer binary from Symantec that’s used to sideload a malicious DLL that, in turn, launches a PowerShell command to download and run another PowerShell script.

Identity Security Risk Assessment

It’s engineered to gather system information and exfiltrate it to the C2 server, and await encrypted PowerShell instructions that are decoded and executed to give attackers full control of the system. The malware also displays a fake “System Configuration” pop-up message as a ruse, while launching a background job to generate fake browser traffic by making HTTP requests to popular websites so as to blend C2 communications with normal network activity.

“The EncryptHub threat actor represents a well-resourced and adaptive adversary, combining social engineering, abuse of trusted platforms, and the exploitation of system vulnerabilities to maintain persistence and control,” Trustwave said.

“Their use of fake video conferencing platforms, encrypted command structures, and evolving malware toolsets underscores the importance of layered defense strategies, ongoing threat intelligence, and user awareness training.”

About The Author

[email protected] The Hacker News

See author's posts

Original post here

What do you feel about this?

  • The Hacker News

Post navigation

Previous: Mobile Phishers Target Brokerage Accounts in ‘Ramp and Dump’ Cashout Scheme
Next: ERMAC V3.0 Banking Trojan Source Code Leak Exposes Full Malware Infrastructure

Author's Other Posts

India Orders Messaging Apps to Work Only With Active SIM Cards to Prevent Fraud and Misuse whatsapp-sim.jpg

India Orders Messaging Apps to Work Only With Active SIM Cards to Prevent Fraud and Misuse

December 2, 2025 0 0
Researchers Capture Lazarus APT’s Remote-Worker Scheme Live on Camera korean.jpg

Researchers Capture Lazarus APT’s Remote-Worker Scheme Live on Camera

December 2, 2025 0 1
GlassWorm Returns with 24 Malicious Extensions Impersonating Popular Developer Tools hacked.jpg

GlassWorm Returns with 24 Malicious Extensions Impersonating Popular Developer Tools

December 2, 2025 0 0
Malicious npm Package Uses Hidden Prompt and Script to Evade AI Security Tools npm-mal.jpg

Malicious npm Package Uses Hidden Prompt and Script to Evade AI Security Tools

December 2, 2025 0 1

Related Stories

whatsapp-sim.jpg
  • The Hacker News

India Orders Messaging Apps to Work Only With Active SIM Cards to Prevent Fraud and Misuse

[email protected] The Hacker News December 2, 2025 0 0
korean.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Researchers Capture Lazarus APT’s Remote-Worker Scheme Live on Camera

[email protected] The Hacker News December 2, 2025 0 1
hacked.jpg
  • The Hacker News

GlassWorm Returns with 24 Malicious Extensions Impersonating Popular Developer Tools

[email protected] The Hacker News December 2, 2025 0 0
npm-mal.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Malicious npm Package Uses Hidden Prompt and Script to Evade AI Security Tools

[email protected] The Hacker News December 2, 2025 0 1
iran-hacking.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Iran-Linked Hackers Hits Israeli Sectors with New MuddyViper Backdoor in Targeted Attacks

[email protected] The Hacker News December 2, 2025 0 0
SecAlerts.jpg
  • The Hacker News

SecAlerts Cuts Through the Noise with a Smarter, Faster Way to Track Vulnerabilities

[email protected] The Hacker News December 2, 2025 0 0

Trending Now

Drones to Diplomas: How Russia’s Largest Private University is Linked to a $25M Essay Mill Drones to Diplomas: How Russia’s Largest Private University is Linked to a $25M Essay Mill 1

Drones to Diplomas: How Russia’s Largest Private University is Linked to a $25M Essay Mill

December 6, 2025 0 0
SMS Phishers Pivot to Points, Taxes, Fake Retailers SMS Phishers Pivot to Points, Taxes, Fake Retailers 2

SMS Phishers Pivot to Points, Taxes, Fake Retailers

December 4, 2025 0 0
India Orders Messaging Apps to Work Only With Active SIM Cards to Prevent Fraud and Misuse whatsapp-sim.jpg 3

India Orders Messaging Apps to Work Only With Active SIM Cards to Prevent Fraud and Misuse

December 2, 2025 0 0
Researchers Capture Lazarus APT’s Remote-Worker Scheme Live on Camera korean.jpg 4

Researchers Capture Lazarus APT’s Remote-Worker Scheme Live on Camera

December 2, 2025 0 1

Connect with Us

Social menu is not set. You need to create menu and assign it to Social Menu on Menu Settings.

Trending News

Drones to Diplomas: How Russia’s Largest Private University is Linked to a $25M Essay Mill Drones to Diplomas: How Russia’s Largest Private University is Linked to a $25M Essay Mill 1
  • Uncategorized

Drones to Diplomas: How Russia’s Largest Private University is Linked to a $25M Essay Mill

December 6, 2025 0 0
SMS Phishers Pivot to Points, Taxes, Fake Retailers SMS Phishers Pivot to Points, Taxes, Fake Retailers 2
  • Uncategorized

SMS Phishers Pivot to Points, Taxes, Fake Retailers

December 4, 2025 0 0
India Orders Messaging Apps to Work Only With Active SIM Cards to Prevent Fraud and Misuse whatsapp-sim.jpg 3
  • The Hacker News

India Orders Messaging Apps to Work Only With Active SIM Cards to Prevent Fraud and Misuse

December 2, 2025 0 0
Researchers Capture Lazarus APT’s Remote-Worker Scheme Live on Camera korean.jpg 4
  • The Hacker News

Researchers Capture Lazarus APT’s Remote-Worker Scheme Live on Camera

December 2, 2025 0 1
GlassWorm Returns with 24 Malicious Extensions Impersonating Popular Developer Tools hacked.jpg 5
  • The Hacker News

GlassWorm Returns with 24 Malicious Extensions Impersonating Popular Developer Tools

December 2, 2025 0 0
Malicious npm Package Uses Hidden Prompt and Script to Evade AI Security Tools npm-mal.jpg 6
  • The Hacker News

Malicious npm Package Uses Hidden Prompt and Script to Evade AI Security Tools

December 2, 2025 0 1
Iran-Linked Hackers Hits Israeli Sectors with New MuddyViper Backdoor in Targeted Attacks iran-hacking.jpg 7
  • The Hacker News

Iran-Linked Hackers Hits Israeli Sectors with New MuddyViper Backdoor in Targeted Attacks

December 2, 2025 0 0

You may have missed

Drones to Diplomas: How Russia’s Largest Private University is Linked to a $25M Essay Mill
  • Uncategorized

Drones to Diplomas: How Russia’s Largest Private University is Linked to a $25M Essay Mill

Sean December 6, 2025 0 0
SMS Phishers Pivot to Points, Taxes, Fake Retailers
  • Uncategorized

SMS Phishers Pivot to Points, Taxes, Fake Retailers

Sean December 4, 2025 0 0
whatsapp-sim.jpg
  • The Hacker News

India Orders Messaging Apps to Work Only With Active SIM Cards to Prevent Fraud and Misuse

[email protected] The Hacker News December 2, 2025 0 0
korean.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Researchers Capture Lazarus APT’s Remote-Worker Scheme Live on Camera

[email protected] The Hacker News December 2, 2025 0 1
Copyright © 2026 All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.