Article
BianLian
Arete Analysis
Threat Actors
Cybersecurity Trends

BianLian is an extortion group first observed in Arete engagements in June 2022. Initially, the group operated with a double extortion model, but around January 2023, it shifted to an extortion-only model after a decryptor for its ransomware executable was released. Since then, BianLian has remained a data extortion-only threat group, typically gaining initial access via Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) credentials or third-party remote access tools.
Notable TTPs
BianLian has a Trojan developed in the Go programming language, which it uses to retain access to a victim’s environment. The Trojan’s use of Go enables quick modification of the code, evasion of detection, and increased difficulty for researchers to analyze.
Since switching to extortion-only, BianLian is notorious for its highly aggressive pressure tactics and is known to repeatedly call and message employees of the victimized companies to get victims to pay the ransom.
Arete Analyst Notes
Although the BianLian extortion group is rarely among the most active groups month-to-month, it has remained a consistent threat since 2022. By focusing on data theft only, the group became proficient in impacting the highest average number of individuals in each data breach. Coupled with aggressive pressure tactics, this resulted in victims paying a ransom in 52% of all BianLian engagements in 2024, in contrast to just 29% of engagements for all threat groups combined. Given its extortion successes, we anticipate the group will remain a persistent threat throughout 2025.
Since late February 2025, Arete has observed several incidents involving ransom letters sent via the postal service and claiming to be from BianLian. Information collected through Arete engagements and available open-source reporting has not definitively confirmed who is sending these letters, but Arete assesses that it is unlikely the ransom letters originated from the BianLian extortion group. Additionally, Arete has not discovered any indications of data exfiltration from the engagements we have investigated for clients who received one of these letters. On Thursday, March 6th the FBI issued a public service announcement which stated they found no connections to BianLian, and assessed the letters were likely a scam.
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This recent campaign also highlights how trusted web properties can be weaponized at scale and coupled with unpatched CMS vulnerabilities. Rather than using the CMS compromise to perpetrate a single attack, threat actors turned it into a supply-chain attack that ultimately affected over 700 trusted websites.
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As network defenders and their tools enhance threat detection capabilities, adversaries increasingly seek methods to bypass these defenses. By combining vulnerability exploitation, social engineering techniques, and staging for ancillary attacks, this campaign successfully bypassed traditional defenses and inflicted significant impact. Defending against hybrid cyberattacks requires comprehensive security controls beyond simply patching vulnerabilities. Organizations should focus on limiting movement within the environment, detecting abuse of trusted applications, and preventing end-user manipulation.
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In a recent campaign, researchers observed threat actors using fake JPEG image files as a delivery mechanism to initiate the deployment of additional malicious components. The false JPEG files are typically distributed via phishing emails or other social engineering-based lures, and are actually PowerShell-based malware that deploys a trojanized version of ConnectWise ScreenConnect to establish and maintain persistence in the compromised environment.
What’s Notable and Unique
This campaign leverages JPEG images as the initial lure, where the images are not merely decoys but part of the infection workflow. Victims are typically led to download or open an image that triggers hidden execution logic or redirects them to a payload-delivery sequence that initiates later stages of the intrusion chain.
The attack chain is designed to blend into legitimate environments, making detection more difficult. Execution typically relies on scripted or native Windows components, often including PowerShell or other living-off-the-land binaries, enabling fileless or near-fileless execution and reducing forensic artifacts on disk.
The multistage design ensures that the initial JPEG does not directly contain the full payload but instead triggers retrieval or decryption steps that progressively assemble the final malicious components in memory.
Analyst Comments
This campaign illustrates how threat actors continue to blur the line between legitimate file handling and malicious execution chains, indicating potential overlap with remote management or administrative tooling. The use of JPEG-based staging combined with script-based execution reflects a broader evolution toward a stealth-first intrusion design, in which file formats serve as triggers rather than payload containers.
Sources
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