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Titan-Stealer: A New Golang-based Info-Stealer Malware

A new Golang-based information stealer malware, named ‘Titan Stealer’ is being promoted by threat actors in their Telegram channel.


Recently, a new Golang-based information stealer malware, named ‘Titan Stealer’ is being promoted by threat actors in their Telegram channel. Initial details regarding the malware were discovered by cybersecurity researcher Will Thomas in November 2022 by using the IoT search engine Shodan. 

Titan is advertised as a malware builder that enables users to alter the malware binary's functionality and the type of data that will be extracted from a victim's system. 

The malware, when launched, initiates a technique called ‘process hollowing’ in order to disseminate the malicious payloads into the memory of a legitimate process called AppLaunch.exe, Microsoft’s .NET ClickOnce Launch Utility. 

According to a recent report by Uptycs security, researchers Karthickkumar Kathiresan and Shilpesh Trivedi say, “the stealer is capable of stealing a variety of information from infected Windows machines, including credential data from browsers and crypto wallets, FTP client details, screenshots, system information, and grabbed files.” 

Targets of The Info Stealer 

The Titan Stealer has been targeting web browsers, including Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Microsoft Edge, Yandex, Opera, Brave, Vivaldi, 7 Star Browser, Iridium Browser, and others. The crypto wallets singled out are Armory, Atomic, Bytecoin, Coinomi, Edge Wallet, Ethereum, Exodus, Guarda, Jaxx Liberty, and Zcash. 

Additionally, it has the ability to collect data from the Telegram desktop app and compile a list of the host's installed programs. 

The gathered information is then transmitted as a Base64-encoded archive file to a remote server under the attacker's control. Additionally, the malware includes a web panel that enables threat actors to access the stolen data. 

How is the Titan Stealer Operated? 

The exact approach used to distribute the malware is still unclear, but the threat actors have utilized numerous methods, such as phishing, malicious ads, and cracked software. 

"One of the primary reasons [threat actors] may be using Golang for their information stealer malware is because it allows them to easily create cross-platform malware that can run on multiple operating systems, such as Windows, Linux, and macOS," says Cyble in its analysis of Titan Stealer. "Additionally, the Go compiled binary files are small in size, making them more difficult to detect by security software." 

The findings come a little over two months after SEKOIA unveiled Aurora Stealer, another Go-based malware that is being used by a number of criminal actors in their campaigns. 

The malware often spreads through websites that mimic a renowned software, with the same domains being continuously updated to host trojanized versions of different programs. 

It is also found to be taking advantage of a tactic called padding in order to artificially inflate the size of the executables to as much as 260MB by adding random data, in order to evade detection by antivirus software. 

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