This article might interest some people, since it's so sophisticated and it can be so easy to catch that you might know someone who's been hit. These have been spreading all over in fake torrents (TorrentLocker is one), be careful out there.

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It’s been over a year since the first wave of cryptographic extortion malware hit computers. Since then, an untold number of individuals, small businesses and even local governments have been hit by various versions of malware that holds victims’ files hostage with encryption, demanding payment by Bitcoin or other e-currency in exchange for a key to reverse the damage. And while the early leader, CryptoLocker, was taken down (along with the “Gameover ZeuS” botnet) last June, other improved “ransomware” packages have sprung up to fill its niche—including the sound-alike CryptoWall.

Ransomware is a strange hybrid of digital mugging and commercial-grade coding and “customer service”—in order to continue to be able to generate cash from their malware, the criminal organizations behind them need to be able to process payments and provide victims with a way to get their files back, lest people refuse to pay because of bad word-of-mouth. And to grow their potential market, the extortionists need to find ways to make their “product” work on a wide range of potential target systems. The apex of this combination of crime and commerce is (at least so far) the latest version of CryptoWall—CryptoWall 2.0.

In a blog post this week, researchers Andrea Allievi and Earl Carter of Cisco‘s Talos Group presented a full code dissection of CryptoWall 2.0 and found a few surprises, aside from using a number of different, sophisticated features to attack systems and evade detection before it can strike. And while the malware is 32-bit Windows code to ensure the widest reach possible, it can detect when a 64-bit Windows environment is available and switch some of its functionality to run in full 64-bit native mode—ensuring it can do maximum damage on the most recent Windows client and server platforms.

Aside from the professionally written code, CryptoWall 2.0 also apparently comes backed by a professional “support” team. As essayist Alina Simone reported in a recent story for the New York Times (“How My Mom Got Hacked”), when her mother missed a deadline for making a Bitcoin payment to the CryptoWall crew because of trouble obtaining Bitcoins and fluctuations in their value—and was slammed with a doubling of the ransom for her files— she was able to talk to the ring through the malware’s messaging interface and explain her situation. The CryptoWallers responded by providing her with the decryption key. Hooray for honor among thieves.

CryptoWall 2.0, like most of the other ransomware variants, is a Windows-specific malware package—though it can run on nearly any version of Windows currently deployed. On the version tested by Talos, it exploited a known 32-bit Windows privilege elevation vulnerability (which executes in “Windows on Windows” mode in 64-bit versions of the Windows OS) to install itself. While that exploit was patched by a Microsoft security update for nearly every Windows operating system up to Windows 8 and Server 2012, other exploits can be used by other versions of the dropper. Typically, the dropper is delivered as part of an e-mail “phishing” attack, but it could also be delivered through a malicious website using an exploit kit. Some samples of CryptoWall have come in on malicious PDF files; Palo Alto Networks discovered one in a spam e-mail disguised as an "Incoming Fax Report."

>> Inside CryptoWall 2.0: Ransomware, professional edition << on Ars Technica, with further technical details.