PowerGhost, a form of fileless malware – which uses a system's native processes to hijack a computer – has reportedly been spreading on corporate networks in India, Brazil, Colombia and Turkey. The software mines an undisclosed cryptocurrency once installed on a computer.
The miner "is capable of stealthily establishing itself in a system and spreading across large corporate networks infecting both workstations and servers," Kaspersky reported.
Illicit crypto miners have been rapidly rising in popularity among the web's criminal fraternity, being hidden in apps and websites to quietly harness user devices to earn the hackers cryptocurrency. Now it seems the methods they use are evolving.
"It appears the growing popularity and rates of cryptocurrencies have convinced the bad guys of the need to invest in new mining techniques – as our data demonstrates, miners are gradually replacing ransomware Trojans," said Kaspersky.