Lummac Stealer Activity - Execution Of More.com And Vbc.exe
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In this page
Rule name | Rule type | Log sources | MITRE ATT&CK tags | Severity |
Lummac Stealer Activity - Execution Of More.com And Vbc.exe | Standard | Windows | Defense Evasion: Process Injection (T1055); Privilege Escalation: Process Injection (T1055) | Trouble |
About the rule
Rule Type
Standard
Rule Description
Lummac Stealer is an infostealer malware that steals sensitive information such as login credentials, passwords, emails, and cookies from a wide range of applications. This stealer leverages the Windows More Utility (more.com) to launch the Visual Basic Command Line Compiler (vbc.exe) to inject the Lummac code and install the stealer software to the system. This rule detects such code injections and activities associated with the Lummac Stealer.
Severity
Trouble
Rule journey
Attack chain scenario
Initial Access → Execution → Privilege Escalation → Process Injection → Data exfiltration
Impact
- System compromise
- Suspicious process creation
- Data theft
Rule Requirement
Prerequisites
- Windows Event Viewer
Logon to Group Policy Management Console with administrative privileges and enable auditing for process creation and termination events. For enhanced process tracking enable the inclusion of command line information in process creation events. Finally, create a new registry key "Microsoft-Windows-Security-Auditing/Operational" in the directory "Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\EventLog".
- Sysmon
Install Sysmon from Microsoft Sysinternals and download the Sysmon configuration file that includes process creation monitoring. Add process creation events to the configuration file to capture all process creations. Finally, create a registry key "Microsoft-Windows-Sysmon/Operational" in the directory "Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\EventLog".
(((( PROCESSNAME ENDS_WITH ""\\vbc.exe"" ) ) OR ((ORIGINALFILENAME = ""vbc.exe"" ))) AND ((( PARENTPROCESSNAME ENDS_WITH ""\\more.com"" ) )))
This rule is triggered when the executed process is associated with the following suspicious elements:
- \\vbc.exe or vbc.exe: Refers to the process or file associated with the Visual Basic .NET Command-Line Compiler used to compile visual basic code to executables.
- more.com: A non essential Windows process or file associated with More Utility used to spawn vbc.exe for malicious activities.
Criteria
Action1: actionname = "Process started" AND PARENTPROCESSNAME endswith "\more.com" AND (PROCESSNAME endswith "\vbc.exe" OR ORIGINALFILENAME = "vbc.exe") select Action1.HOSTNAME,Action1.MESSAGE,Action1.COMMANDLINE,Action1.FILE_NAME,Action1.PROCESSNAME,Action1.USERNAME,Action1.PARENTPROCESSNAME
Detection
Execution Mode
realtime
Log Sources
Windows
MITRE ATT&CK
Defense Evasion: Process Injection (T1055); Privilege Escalation: Process Injection (T1055)
Security Standards
Enabling this rule will help you meet the security standard's requirement listed below:
DE.AE-02: Potentially adverse events are analyzed to better understand associated activities.
When this rule is triggered, you're notified of the execution of the Lummac Stealer malware. This enables you to identify malicious process creations in the system and detect attempts of data exfiltration in the network.
Author
Joseliyo Sanchez, @Joseliyo_Jstnk
Future actions
Known False Positives
This rule might be triggered during legitimate process executions involving more.com and vbc.exe.
Next Steps
When this rule is triggered, the following measures can be implemented:
- Identification: Identify if the flagged event is a new incident or part of an existing incident.
- Analysis: Analyze the impact and extent of the incident to comprehend the severity of the attack using the Incident Workbench.
- Response: Respond promptly by initiating an automated workflow to interrupt the network connections and cease the malicious process.
- System process audit: Continuously monitor system processes and file executions to detect suspicious process creations and malware executions.
Mitigation
Mitigation ID | Mitigation Name | Mitigation description |
M1040 | Configure endpoint security tools to identify process injections based on anomalous behavior patterns. | |
M1026 | Restrict the use of ptrace to privileged users only to prevent malicious process injections. |


