CyberVolk
Hunt this family in your stack
Mallory pivots from this family to the IOCs, detections, and named campaigns that touch your stack, and pages you when something new lands.
Groups observed using it
1 distinct threat actor attributed by public researchers. Open in Mallory to see the full evidence chain and overlapping campaigns.
attention turned to CyberVolk - a pro-Russian hacktivist collective - that rolled out ransomware yet embedded the primary decryption keys directly within the code.
IOCs tracked for this family
3 indicators attributed across vendor reports, sandbox runs, and researcher write-ups. Full values are available in Mallory.
File hashes (MD5, SHA-1, SHA-256) from samples and reports.
Recent activity
3 sources tracked across advisories, community write-ups, and news. New activity surfaces here as Mallory finds it.
Ransomware from the CyberVolk collective contained embedded primary decryption keys, allowing victims to decrypt files without paying.
Ransomware service whose developers hardcoded master keys into executables, enabling victims to decrypt files without paying.
A Windows-specific ransomware derived from AzzaSec Ransom code, written in C++, that drops ransom notes and wallpapers, terminates MMC and Task Manager, encrypts files, and uses a countdown timer with BTC/USDT payment instructions.
The version that knows your environment.
Match every observed IP, domain, and hash against your live telemetry.
Named campaigns wielding this family, with evidence pinned to each claim.
CVEs this family uses for access and lateral movement.
YARA, Sigma, Snort, and vendor rules, auto-deployed to your SIEM.
Every documented technique, ranked by evidence weight.
Reddit, Mastodon, and CTI community discussion around this family.