The listings featured on this site are from companies from which this site receives compensation and some are co-owned by our parent company. This influence: Rank and manner in which listings are presented.
Learn more
The How To Guide was established in 2014 to review VPN services and cover privacy-related stories. Today, our team of hundreds of cybersecurity researchers, writers, and editors continues to help readers fight for their online freedom in partnership with Kape Technologies PLC, which also owns the following products: Holiday.com, ExpressVPN, CyberGhost, and Private Internet Access which may be ranked and reviewed on this website. The reviews published on The How To Guide are believed to be accurate as of the date of each article, and written according to our strict reviewing standards that prioritize professional and honest examination of the reviewer, taking into account the technical capabilities and qualities of the product together with its commercial value for users. The rankings and reviews we publish may also take into consideration the common ownership mentioned above, and affiliate commissions we earn for purchases through links on our website. We do not review all VPN providers and information is believed to be accurate as of the date of each article.
Advertising Disclosure

The How To Guide was established in 2014 to review VPN services and cover privacy-related stories. Today, our team of hundreds of cybersecurity researchers, writers, and editors continues to help readers fight for their online freedom in partnership with Kape Technologies PLC, which also owns the following products: Holiday.com, ExpressVPN, CyberGhost, and Private Internet Access which may be ranked and reviewed on this website. The reviews published on The How To Guide are believed to be accurate as of the date of each article, and written according to our strict reviewing standards that prioritize professional and honest examination of the reviewer, taking into account the technical capabilities and qualities of the product together with its commercial value for users. The rankings and reviews we publish may also take into consideration the common ownership mentioned above, and affiliate commissions we earn for purchases through links on our website. We do not review all VPN providers and information is believed to be accurate as of the date of each article.

Excel Exploit Used to Deploy Fileless Remcos RAT

Excel Exploit Used to Deploy Fileless Remcos RAT
Author Image Anka Markovic Borak
Anka Markovic Borak First published on November 16, 2024 Writer and Quality Assessor

A new phishing campaign has been exposed involving a fileless variant of the Remcos RAT malware, which is being spread via an exploit in Microsoft Excel. Cybersecurity experts at Fortinet recently highlighted the methods used by the attackers.

The attack begins with a phishing email disguised as a purchase order, enticing recipients to open a booby-trapped Excel document. This document exploits a known remote code execution vulnerability in Microsoft Office (CVE-2017-0199), which has a high severity CVSS score of 7.8. Once activated, the exploit downloads an HTML Application (HTA) file named “cookienetbookinetcahce.hta” from a remote server (IP: 192.3.220[.]22) and runs it via mshta.exe.

The downloaded HTA file, cloaked in layers of JavaScript, Visual Basic Script, and PowerShell, functions as a launchpad for further malware retrieval, undetected by security tools. It pulls an executable for an obfuscated PowerShell program, which uses anti-analysis techniques to resist examination. The payload ultimately injects and runs the Remcos RAT directly in memory, making it fileless.

Remcos (Remote Control and Surveillance) RAT (Remote Access Trojan) is a powerful tool for information harvesting. It allows attackers to collect data like system metadata and execute various commands through a command-and-control (C2) server. Potential actions include file exfiltration, process manipulation, Windows Registry editing, system service management, clipboard monitoring, and webcam or microphone control. It can also deploy other payloads, record screens, and disable user input.

The discovery of this campaign also comes alongside another report from Wallarm, which warns that threat actors are misusing Docusign APIs for phishing scams involving fake invoices. By creating legitimate Docusign accounts, attackers can craft invoice templates impersonating well-known companies, tricking recipients into signing documents and authorizing payments under false pretenses.

About the Author

  • Author Image Anka Markovic Borak
  • Anka Markovic Borak Writer and Quality Assessor

Anka Markovic-Borak is a writer and quality assessor at The How To Guide, who leverages her expertise to write insightful articles on cybersecurity, driven by her passion for protecting online privacy. She also ensures articles written by others are reaching The How To Guide's high standards.

Please, comment on how to improve this article. Your feedback matters!

Leave a comment

This field must contain more than 50 characters

The field content should not exceed 1000 letters

Sorry, links are not allowed in this field!

Name should contain at least 3 letters

The field content should not exceed 80 letters

Sorry, links are not allowed in this field!

Please enter a valid email address