Malicious RTF — malware analysis report

Static analysis result for SHA-256 7d7c9989e18999f2…

MALICIOUS

RTF

30.6 KB First seen: 2019-01-11
MD5: d55dc9a27ce2293700d8aa510a3daaa5 SHA-1: 97e982ff0313720ff71ac29166459ae83aed332b SHA-256: 7d7c9989e18999f278f26a4b551af0fc471a7640385928405560e7510c3fcb9d
140 Risk Score

Malware Insights

MITRE ATT&CK
T1203 Exploitation for Client Execution T1566.001 Spearphishing Attachment

The RTF file contains high-severity heuristics indicating the presence of OLE objects that are automatically linked and updated. These objects likely contain a URL moniker designed to download and execute a secondary payload, a common technique for initial execution of malware. The specific URL is obfuscated but the presence of the moniker is a strong indicator of malicious intent.

Heuristics 4

  • URL Moniker in RTF OLE object high CVE related RTF_URL_MONIKER_RELATED
    RTF contains a URL Moniker GUID in OLE object context, but no decoded remote target was confirmed. Treat as related OLE2Link attack-surface evidence rather than proof of CVE-2017-0199 exploitation.
  • Automatically linked OLE object high RTF_OBJAUTLINK
    RTF contains \objautlink — an automatically linked OLE object surface that can be updated or activated when Word opens the document.
  • \objupdate forces OLE activation high RTF_OBJUPDATE
    RTF contains \objupdate — forces automatic OLE object instantiation when the document is opened, bypassing user interaction. Almost exclusively seen in Equation Editor exploit documents.
  • OLE object data medium RTF_OBJDATA
    RTF contains 1 \objdata section(s) — embedded OLE objects

Extracted artifacts 1

Files carved from inside the sample during analysis.

FilenameKindSourceSize
objdata_00_off0000546a.bin rtf-objdata-decoded RTF \objdata at offset 0x546A 3306 bytes
SHA-256: 26f6d0cc2e598df832ad1aaa53ed209753288a4ae724d5a34dd1acddfb0ce89f