This article is more than 1 year old

Miner vs miner: Attack script seeks out and destroys competing currency crafters

There is no honour among CPU thieves

Cryptocurrency-mining malware-scum have started to write code that evicts rivals from compromised computers.

The miner in question was first noticed by SANS Internet Storm Center handler Xavier Mertens. Mertens spotted the PowerShell script on March 4, and noting that it kills any other CPU-greedy processes it spots on target machines, he wrote: “The fight for CPU cycles started!”

Pre-infection, the attack script checks whether a target machine is 32-bit or 64-bit and downloads files known to VirusTotal as hpdriver.exe or hpw64 (they're pretending to be HP drivers of some kind).

If successfully installed, the attack then lists running processes and kills any it doesn't like. Mertens noted that alongside ordinary Windows stuff, the list of death-marked processes includes many associated with cryptominers, some of which are listed below.

Silence
Carbon
xmrig32
nscpucnminer64
cpuminer
xmr86
xmrig
xmr

Mertens wrote that the script also checks for processes associated with security tools.

Marten's next post is also worth a look if you're a Linux admin. He followed up on this Tweet from ESET's Michal Malik.

It's a bash script that tries to push a miner onto Linux boxes, along with scanning the Internet for Windows machines vulnerable to the NSA's EternalBlue attack. ®

More about

TIP US OFF

Send us news


Other stories you might like