Skip to main content

SecurityWeek, By Eduard Kovacs

The threat, dubbed "CTB-Locker" and detected as Critroni.A by Microsoft, was initially used against Russian-speaking users, but according to French researcher known as Kafeine, an English version has also been launched recently. The name CTB, which stems from Curve/Tor/Bitcoin, describes some of the key advantages of using this piece of ransomware.

The malware developers claim that the elliptic curve cryptography that's used to encrypt victims' files makes it impossible to decrypt them without paying the ransom. The Tor anonymity network is utilized to hide the malware's command and control (C&C) servers in order to make operations more difficult to disrupt and to protect the identity of the owner, the developers of Critroni said.

According to ThreatPost, this is the first crypto ransomware that uses Tor to protect C&C servers, a technique usually seen in banking Trojans. Furthermore, unlike other threats that rely on the anonymity network, the Tor components are embedded in the malware's body to make it more efficient and to help it avoid detection, said Kaspersky Senior Malware Analyst Fedor Sinitsyn. Read more

Critroni: First File-Encrypting Ransomware to Use Tor

Critroni: First File-Encrypting Ransomware to Use Tor
Kaspersky Logo