Article Details

Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2025-03-05 13:40:36.019

Source: https://thehackernews.com/2025/03/dark-caracal-uses-poco-rat-to-target.html

Original Article Text

Click to Toggle View

Dark Caracal Uses Poco RAT to Target Spanish-Speaking Enterprises in Latin America. The threat actor known as Dark Caracal has been attributed to a campaign that deployed a remote access trojan called Poco RAT in attacks targeting Spanish-speaking targets in Latin America in 2024. The findings come from Russian cybersecurity company Positive Technologies, which described the malware as loaded with a "full suite of espionage features." "It could upload files, capture screenshots, execute commands, and manipulate system processes," researchers Denis Kazakov and Sergey Samokhin said in a technical report published last week. Poco RAT was previously documented by Cofense in July 2024, detailing the phishing attacks aimed at mining, manufacturing, hospitality, and utilities sectors. The infection chains are characterized by the use of finance-themed lures that trigger a multi-step process to deploy the malware. While the campaign was not attributed to any threat at that time, Positive Technologies said it identified tradecraft overlaps with Dark Caracal, an advanced persistent threat (APT) known for operating malware families like CrossRAT and Bandook. It's operational since at least 2012. In 2021, the cyber mercenary group was tied to a cyber espionage campaign dubbed Bandidos that delivered an updated version of the Bandook malware against Spanish-speaking countries in South America. The latest set of attacks continue their focus on Spanish-speaking users, leveraging phishing emails with invoice-related themes that bear malicious attachments written in Spanish as a starting point. An analysis of Poco RAT artifacts indicates the intrusions are mainly targeting enterprises in Venezuela, Chile, the Dominican Republic, Colombia, and Ecuador. The attached decoy documents impersonate a wide range of industry verticals, including banking, manufacturing, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, and logistics, in an attempt to lend the scheme a little more believability. When opened, the files redirect victims to a link that triggers the download of a .rev archive from legitimate file-sharing services or cloud storage platforms like Google Drive and Dropbox. "Files with the .rev extension are generated using WinRAR and were originally designed to reconstruct missing or corrupted volumes in multi-part archives," the researchers explained. "Threat actors repurpose them as stealthy payload containers, helping malware evade security detection." Present within the archive is a Delphi-based dropper that's responsible for launching Poco RAT, which, in turn, establishes contact with a remote server and grants attackers full control over compromised hosts. The malware gets its name from the use of POCO libraries in its C++ codebase. Some of the supported commands by Poco RAT are listed below - "Poco RAT does not come with a built-in persistence mechanism," the researchers said. "Once initial reconnaissance is complete, the server likely issues a command to establish persistence, or attackers may use Poco RAT as a stepping stone to deploy the primary payload."

Daily Brief Summary

NATION STATE ACTIVITY // Dark Caracal Deploys Poco RAT in Latin America Espionage Campaign

Dark Caracal executed targeted cyber-attacks on Spanish-speaking businesses across Latin America using a malware known as Poco RAT.

Positive Technologies identified the malware's capabilities, including file uploads, screenshot captures, command executions, and system manipulations.

Initial infection typically involved finance-themed phishing emails with malicious attachments, leading to a multi-step malware deployment process.

This cyber espionage campaign, attributed to Dark Caracal by Positive Technologies due to overlaps in cyber tradecraft, targets sectors like mining, manufacturing, and utilities.

Victims include enterprises from Venezuela, Chile, the Dominican Republic, Colombia, and Ecuador with decoy documents spanning diverse industries.

The malware deployment leverages legitimate platforms like Google Drive and Dropbox, using .rev archive files to evade detection.

Poco RAT is a Delphi-based trojan that establishes remote server connections for full control over the infected systems, concentrating on initial reconnaissance and potential further payloads.