New, by me: Aisuru Botnet Shifts from DDoS to Residential Proxies

Aisuru, the botnet responsible for a series of record-smashing distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks this year, recently was overhauled to support a more low-key, lucrative and sustainable business: Renting hundreds of thousands of infected Internet of Things (IoT) devices to proxy services that help cybercriminals anonymize their traffic. Experts say a glut of proxies from Aisuru and other sources is fueling large-scale data harvesting efforts tied to various artificial intelligence (AI) projects, helping content scrapers evade detection by routing their traffic through residential connections that appear to be regular Internet users.

I included a section at the end mentioning that the latest Aisuru botnet code apparently tells infected systems to check in at the host fuckbriankrebs[.]com. When I heard this, I wondered what its use might be other than to just say what the domain says. But we also noticed the domain was unregistered....

Happily, the domain name was deftly snatched up last week by Philippe Caturegli, “chief hacking officer” for the security intelligence company Seralys.

Caturegli enabled a passive DNS server on that domain and within a few hours received more than 700,000 requests for unique subdomains on fuckbriankrebs[.]com.

But even with that visibility into Aisuru, it is difficult to use this domain check-in feature to measure its true size, Brundage said. After all, he said, the systems that are phoning home to the domain are only a small portion of the overall botnet.

“The bots are hardcoded to just spam lookups on the subdomains,” he said. “So anytime an infection occurs or it runs in the background, it will do one of those DNS queries.”

Read more:
https://krebsonsecurity.com/2025/10/aisuru-botnet-shifts-from-ddos-to-residential-proxies/

I guess I can write about these guys till I'm blue in the face. These proxy/botnet stories have a lot of moving parts, so I get it when another big development makes everyone yawn. But don't take my word for it: If you look at Cloudflare Radar right now, you can see an Aisuru botnet C2 domain is the most popular domain in the world, more popular than Amazon, Apple, Google and Microsoft. That's fairly remarkable I think.

Sometimes a picture is worth more than a whole bunch of words.

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2025/10/aisuru-botnet-shifts-from-ddos-to-residential-proxies/

@briankrebs It's almost like CloudFlare should notice and care. But I digress, they have made it clear it is our job to find the badness on their network and to block it from our end.
@chetwisniewski @briankrebs No filter means no filter. CF provides dns services with malware blocking to
@bkk @briankrebs Sounds like another company's business plan. Create a problem and sell me the solution?