NightSpire Ransomware Uses RDP Access and Remote Admin Tools for Stealthy Persistence

A new ransomware threat is making waves across dozens of industries and countries, using a surprisingly simple but effective approach to break into systems and lock victims out of their own data.

NightSpire, first identified in early 2025, has already shown it is willing to cast a wide net, hitting hospitals, schools, government offices, and financial institutions alike. What makes it stand out is not just what it encrypts, but how quietly it moves before anyone notices.

NightSpire operates through a double extortion model. Attackers first steal sensitive files from the victim’s environment, then encrypt everything in sight.

If the victim refuses to pay, the criminals threaten to publish the stolen data on a Tor-based leak website. Between March and June 2025, NightSpire hit at least 64 organizations across 33 countries, with the United States topping the victim list, followed by Turkey, Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan, Mexico, Spain, and Egypt.

Analysts at Picus Security, who documented the attack chain in detail, noted that the encryptor is built on Go, a programming language known for creating lightweight, cross-platform executables.

The malware appends the .nspire extension to every locked file and drops a ransom note inside each affected folder. Notably, it also encrypts OneDrive files without changing their extensions, a behavior that can easily catch victims off guard.

The speed at which NightSpire has grown its victim list is alarming. In just three months, operators logged over 45 victims on their own leak blog.

The attacks span a wide range of sectors, from healthcare and education to manufacturing, hospitality, IT services, and logistics. No industry appears off-limits, and the global spread of victims points to a well-coordinated and motivated threat operation.

Picus Security said in a report shared with Cyber Security News, that what makes NightSpire especially concerning for defenders is its deliberate use of trusted software to blend into normal network activity and avoid detection for as long as possible.

NightSpire Ransomware Uses RDP Access and Remote Admin Tools

NightSpire gains initial access through Remote Desktop Protocol, a legitimate Windows feature used by IT teams around the world every day.

Once inside, instead of deploying custom backdoors that might trigger security alerts, attackers install widely trusted remote administration software to maintain a steady foothold on compromised machines.

Chrome Remote Desktop was deployed on at least two compromised machines, running as a persistent Windows service named “Chrome Remote Desktop Service.”

The Google account linked to this deployment was prince1990905@gmail[.]com, showing just how little effort was needed to establish long-term access.

On a separate endpoint, AnyDesk was installed, creating both a Windows service and a startup shortcut so it launched automatically on every reboot.

This approach gives attackers a powerful advantage. Because these tools are legitimate and commonly used for IT support, they are far less likely to raise flags in security monitoring. By the time defenders notice anything unusual, the attacker may have already spent days inside the network.

Discovery, Exfiltration, and Encryption at Scale

After securing persistence, the attackers move quickly to locate and collect valuable data. They deploy Everything by voidtools, a free file search utility that scans entire drives in seconds, letting them pinpoint sensitive documents almost instantly.

Targeted folders are then compressed into password-protected archives using 7-Zip, reducing the number of files that need to be transferred out.

Those archives are uploaded to MEGA cloud storage using MEGAsync, a free sync tool that blends into normal activity.

The Go-based encryptor is then launched, walking through every accessible drive and path, renaming each file with the .nspire extension, and dropping ransom notes throughout the system.

Organizations should monitor for unexpected use of remote access tools and cloud sync applications on endpoints.

Restricting RDP access, enforcing multi-factor authentication, and blocking unauthorized software installations are practical steps that cut the risk significantly.

Security teams can also simulate NightSpire attack patterns against their own defenses to find and close gaps before real attackers do.

Indicators of Compromise (IoCs):-

TypeIndicatorDescription
SHA256 Hashbde50a42efc079edde1a314243ad339db2d42e343fbbcd39117803b0f5960355File encryptor (enc.exe), December 2, 2025 
SHA256 Hashad67031e2ca68764fe1a7d6632c02b02a299d59efb920710011a9a2ccf4399b7File encryptor (enc.exe), March 25, 2026 
File Extension.nspireExtension appended to all encrypted files 
Ransom Note Filename_nightspire_readme.txtRansom note filename from December 2, 2025 incident 
Ransom Note Filename[nspire_msg].txtRansom note filename from March 25, 2026 incident 
Email Addressprince1990905@gmail[.]comGoogle account associated with Chrome Remote Desktop deployment, March 24-25, 2026 
Directory PathC:Users[REDACTED]DownloadsThreat actor staging folder observed March 25, 2026 [page:1]

Note: IP addresses and domains are intentionally defanged (e.g., [.]) to prevent accidental resolution or hyperlinking. Re-fang only within controlled threat intelligence platforms such as MISP, VirusTotal, or your SIEM.

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The post NightSpire Ransomware Uses RDP Access and Remote Admin Tools for Stealthy Persistence appeared first on Cyber Security News.


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