Ransomware Research
About AAC
AAC
AAC was first discovered in July 2017 in enterprise cloud environments.
Name | AAC |
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First Seen | July 2017 |
Targeting
Behavior of AAC
AAC is known to target specific file types. Below are all known file types that AAC is known to infect.
In some cases, ransomware will update the modified date, when it encrypts files. AAC updates the last modified date of the file it targets.
Learn More
Characteristics of AAC
Here are some of the unique characteristics that are helpful to know about AAC.
Suffixes
Some ransomware will change or append a suffix to the end of the file after they are encrypted, including changing the extension of a file. Here are some of the possible suffixes that AAC ransomware is known to change.
Suffixes | .aac |
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Ransomware Notes
Not all ransomware leaves a note. However, some ransomware leaves the infected party instructions on what the user should do to get rid of the ransomware, or satisfy the ransom. This often involves transferring money, often bitcoin or another cryptocurrency to a designated wallet.
Below are the type(s) of notes, content, and typical locations where Elastio has found ransom notes from AAC.
Type | file |
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File Name | Learn how to recover your files.txt |
Location | EveryFolder |
Executables
These are the names of the executables that contain the undetonated ransomware payload for AAC.
Executables | invoice.pdf.exe, 8.bin, 12.bin, svchost.exe |
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External Pages
Ransomware often links to external pages such as payment pages, telegram contacts, etc. Below are some of the URLs Elastio has found to be associated with AAC.
External Pages |
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How Elastio can help
Don’t let ransomware
take over your data.
Elastio is a cloud-native data resilience platform on AWS, providing robust security and assuring the recoverability of critical data in cloud environments.
Elastio protects data from ransomware and malware evading perimeter defenses and mitigates downtime, data loss, and reputational harm for businesses.