Broken VECT 2.0 ransomware acts as a data wiper for large files
Bleeping ComputerArchived Apr 29, 2026✓ Full text saved
Researchers are warning that the VECT 2.0 ransomware has a problem in the way it handles encryption nonces that leads to permanently destroying larger files rather than encrypt them. [...]
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✦ AI Summary· Claude Sonnet
Broken VECT 2.0 ransomware acts as a data wiper for large files
By Bill Toulas
April 28, 2026 05:25 PM 0
Researchers are warning that the VECT 2.0 ransomware has a problem in the way it handles encryption nonces that leads to permanently destroying larger files rather than encrypt them.
VECT has been advertised on one of the latest BreachForums iterations, inviting registered users to become affiliates, and distributing access keys via private messages to those who showed interest.
At some point, VECT operators announced a partnership with TeamPCP, the threat group responsible for the recent supply-chain attacks impacting Trivy, LiteLLM, and Telnyx, as well as an attack against the European Commission.
In the announcement, VECT operators stated that their goal was to exploit victims of those supply-chain compromises, deploying ransomware payloads in their environments, as well as to conduct larger supply-chain attacks against other organizations.
VECT operators' post on BreachForums
Source: Check Point
Faulty ransomware
While this is meant to increase encryption speed for larger files, because all chunk encryptions use the same memory buffer for the nonce output, each new nonce overwrites the previous one.
Once all chunks are processed, only the last nonce generated remains in memory, and only that one is written to disk.
As a result, the only portion of the file that is recoverable is the last 25%, with the previous three parts being impossible to decrypt, as the nonces have been lost.
Those lost nonces aren’t transmitted to the attacker either, so even if VECT operators wanted to decrypt the files for victims paying the ransom, they wouldn’t be able to.
Flawed nonce handling logic
Source: Check Point
While this is meant to increase encryption speed for larger files, because all chunk encryptions use the same memory buffer for the nonce output, each new nonce overwrites the previous one.
Once all chunks are processed, only the last nonce generated remains in memory, and only that one is written to disk.
As a result, the only portion of the file that is recoverable is the last 25%, with the previous three parts being impossible to decrypt, as the nonces have been lost.
Those lost nonces aren’t transmitted to the attacker either, so even if VECT operators wanted to decrypt the files for victims paying the ransom, they wouldn’t be able to.
The VECT 2.0 ransom note
Source: Check Point
Check Point notes that, since most valuable enterprise files, including VM disks, database files, and backups, are above 128kb, VECT’s impact as a data wiper can be catastrophic in most environments.
“At a threshold of only 128 KB, smaller than a typical email attachment or office document, what the code classifies as a large file encompasses not just VM disks, databases, and backups, but routine documents, spreadsheets, and mailboxes. In practice, almost nothing a victim would care to recover falls below this boundary,” Check Point says.
The researchers found that the same nonce-handling flaw is present across all variants of the VECT 2.0 ransomware, including Windows, Linux, and ESXi, so the same data-wiping behavior applies across all cases.
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