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Summary
Affected platforms
The following platforms are known to be affected:
Threat details
At present, it is unclear how Zenis is being distributed although there is evidence to suggest it is being delivered using compromised remote desktop services. Once installed it will attempt to delete Volume Shadow copies as well as disable other recovery services. Any backup files are overwritten three times before deletion.
After encrypting files, Zenis will alter the filenames before dropping a ransom note in each subfolder.
Threat updates
| Date | Update |
|---|---|
| 10 Apr 2018 |
It has come to CareCERT's attention that Zenis is part of a larger ransomware family, known as InfiniteTear, along with BlackRuby and WhiteRose. |
Remediation steps
| Type | Step |
|---|---|
|
If a computer on your network becomes infected with ransomware it will begin encrypting local machine files and files on any network the logged-in user has permission to access. For system administration accounts this may include backup storage locations. To avoid becoming infected with ransomware, ensure that:
Identifying the source of infection: Identifying the infected machine and unplugging / disconnecting or quarantining it from the network is essential to damage limitation.
To limit the damage of ransomware and enable recovery: All critical data must be backed up, and these backups must be sufficiently protected/kept out of reach of ransomware.
The only guaranteed way to recover from a ransomware infection is to restore all affected files from their most recent backup |
Last edited: 17 February 2020 12:58 pm