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Today — 8 May 2024Security News

LiteSpeed Cache WordPress plugin actively exploited in the wild

8 May 2024 at 11:48

Threat actors are exploiting a high-severity vulnerability in the LiteSpeed Cache plugin for WordPress to take over web sites.

WPScan researchers reported that threat actors are exploiting a high-severity vulnerability in LiteSpeed Cache plugin for WordPress.

LiteSpeed Cache for WordPress (LSCWP) is an all-in-one site acceleration plugin, featuring an exclusive server-level cache and a collection of optimization features. The plugin has over 5 million active installations.

The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2023-40000 CVSS score: 8.3, is an Improper Neutralization of Input During Web Page Generation (‘Cross-site Scripting’) issue in LiteSpeed Technologies LiteSpeed Cache that allows Stored XSS.

Attackers exploited the issue to create a rogue admin account, named wpsupp‑user and wp‑configuser, on vulnerable websites.

Upon creating admin accounts, threat actors can gain full control over the website.

Patchstack discovered the stored cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in February 2024.

An unauthenticated user can trigger the issue to elevate privileges by using specially crafted HTTP requests.

WPScan reported that threat actors may inject a malicious script into vulnerable versions of the LiteSpeed plugin. The researchers observed a surge in access to a malicious URL on April 2nd and on April 27.

“The most common IP addresses that were probably scanning for vulnerable sites were 94.102.51.144, with 1,232,810 requests, and 31.43.191.220 with 70,472 requests.” reads WPScan. “The most common IP addresses that were probably scanning for vulnerable sites were 94.102.51.144, with 1,232,810 requests, and 31.43.191.220 with 70,472 requests.”

The vulnerability was fixed in October 2023 with the release of version 5.7.0.1.

Researchers provided indicators of compromise for these attacks, including malicious URLs involved in the campaign: https[:]//dns[.]startservicefounds.com/service/f[.]php, https[:]//api[.]startservicefounds[.]com, and https[:]//cache[.]cloudswiftcdn[.]com. The researchers also recommends to Watch out for IPs associated with the malware, such as 45.150.67.235.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, UK Ministry of Defense)

The Fundamentals of Cloud Security Stress Testing

8 May 2024 at 10:58
״Defenders think in lists, attackers think in graphs,” said John Lambert from Microsoft, distilling the fundamental difference in mindset between those who defend IT systems and those who try to compromise them. The traditional approach for defenders is to list security gaps directly related to their assets in the network and eliminate as many as possible, starting with the most critical.

Hijack Loader Malware Employs Process Hollowing, UAC Bypass in Latest Version

By: Newsroom
8 May 2024 at 10:58
A newer version of a malware loader called Hijack Loader has been observed incorporating an updated set of anti-analysis techniques to fly under the radar. "These enhancements aim to increase the malware's stealthiness, thereby remaining undetected for longer periods of time," Zscaler ThreatLabz researcher Muhammed Irfan V A said in a technical report. "Hijack

Most Tinyproxy Instances are potentially vulnerable to flaw CVE-2023-49606

8 May 2024 at 09:19

A critical Remote Code Execution vulnerability in the Tinyproxy service potentially impacted 50,000 Internet-Exposing hosts.

Researchers from Cisco Talos reported a use-after-free vulnerability in the HTTP Connection Headers parsing of Tinyproxy 1.11.1 and Tinyproxy 1.10.0. The issue is tracked as CVE-2023-49606 and received a CVSS score of 9.8. The exploitation of the issue can potentially lead to remote code execution.

“A specially crafted HTTP header can trigger reuse of previously freed memory, which leads to memory corruption and could lead to remote code execution. An attacker needs to make an unauthenticated HTTP request to trigger this vulnerability.” reads the advisory.

Tinyproxy is an open-source HTTP proxy daemon designed for simplicity and efficiency.

The vulnerability impacts over 90,000 hosts that expose a Tinyproxy service on the internet. Talos researchers published a proof-of-concept exploit code for this vulnerability.

“As of May 3, 2024, Censys observed over 90,000 hosts exposing a Tinyproxy service, ~57% of which are potentially vulnerable to this exploit.” reads the report

Most of the exposed hosts are in the United States, followed by South Korea and China.

CountryHost CountPercentage
United States3284636.37%
South Korea1835820.33%
China78088.65%
France52085.77%
Germany36804.07%

Maintainers of the project temporarily addressed the issue with the release of version 1.11.1. tinyproxy 1.11.2 release will definitively fix the issue.

  • “the issue is fixed in master with commit 12a8484

the code may appear naive, but it allows to circumvent the allocation of more memory which could fail again. the straight-forward fix would be to strdup the value retrieved from the key/value store, and then work on that and free it later.

  • the code is only triggered after access list checks and authentication have succeeded.
    so if you use basic auth with a reasonably secure password or allow only specific trusted hosts you won’t have to worry. same if your proxy is only available on a trusted private network, like inside a corporate environment (you gotta trust your employees anyway).

so it seems most tinyproxy users won’t have to worry – because who runs an entirely open proxy on the open internet these days ?”

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, RCE)

UK Ministry of Defense disclosed a third-party data breach exposing military personnel data 

8 May 2024 at 07:34

The UK Ministry of Defense disclosed a data breach at a third-party payroll system that exposed data of armed forces personnel and veterans.

The UK Ministry of Defense disclosed a data breach impacting a third-party payroll system that exposed data of approximately 272,000 armed forces personnel and veterans.

The Ministry of Defence revealed that a malign actor gained access to part of the Armed Forces payment network, which is an external system completely separate to MOD’s core network.

Defence Secretary Grant Shapps told House of Commons that the impacted system is not connected to the main military HR system.

The UK Ministry of Defense is reviewing the operations of the impacted contractor and announced that appropriate measures will be taken.

The compromised information includes the personal data of regular and reserve personnel and some recently retired veterans. The malicious actor gained access to names and bank details, and, in a smaller number of cases, addresses of the impacted personnel.

The UK government did not publicly attribute the attack, however, the BBC reported that UK ministers suspected China was responsible

“Grant Shapps told MPs the government had reason to believe the hack “was the suspected work of a malign actor” – and the BBC understands that ministers suspect China was responsible.” states the BBC.

Mr. Shapps publicly criticized the contractor, stating there was “evidence of failings” in the management of the breached system.

“For reasons of national security, we can’t release further details of the suspected cyber activity behind this incident,” Mr. Shapps added.

China denied any involvement in the attack and labeled the accusation as a “fabricated and malicious slander”.

“We urge the relevant parties in the UK to stop spreading false information, stop fabricating so-called China threat narratives, and stop their anti-China political farce,” a spokesman for the Chinese embassy in the UK said.

Labour’s shadow defence secretary John Healey speculated that the external contractor operating the breached system was Shared Services Connected Ltd (SSCL).

SSCL is a joint venture between the British government and a private tech firm, it provides services to the Home Office, Cabinet Office and Ministry of Justice.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, UK Ministry of Defense)

Hackers Exploiting LiteSpeed Cache Bug to Gain Full Control of WordPress Sites

By: Newsroom
8 May 2024 at 07:03
A high-severity flaw impacting the LiteSpeed Cache plugin for WordPress is being actively exploited by threat actors to create rogue admin accounts on susceptible websites. The findings come from WPScan, which said that the vulnerability (CVE-2023-40000, CVSS score: 8.3) has been leveraged to set up bogus admin users with the names wpsupp‑user 

Yesterday — 7 May 2024Security News

Law enforcement agencies identified LockBit ransomware admin and sanctioned him

7 May 2024 at 20:32

The FBI, UK National Crime Agency, and Europol revealed the identity of the admin of the LockBit operation and sanctioned him.

The FBI, UK National Crime Agency, and Europol have unmasked the identity of the admin of the LockBit ransomware operation, aka ‘LockBitSupp’ and ‘putinkrab’ , and issued sanctions against him. It was the first time that the admin of the notorious group was identified by law enforcement.

The man is a Russian national named Dmitry Yuryevich Khoroshev (31) of Voronezh, Russia.

“The sanctions against Russian national Dmitry Khoroshev (pictured), the administrator and developer of the LockBit ransomware group, are being announced today by the FCDO alongside the US Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) and the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs.” reads the press release published by NCA.

The NCA states that Khoroshev will now be subject to a series of asset freezes and travel bans.

“Khoroshev, AKA LockBitSupp, who thrived on anonymity and offered a $10 million reward to anyone who could reveal his identity, will now be subject to a series of asset freezes and travel bans.” continues the NCA.

According to the UK agency, data retrieved from the systems belonging to the ransomware gang revealed that from June 2022 to February 2024, the criminals gave orchestrated over 7,000 attacks. The most targeted countries included the US, UK, France, Germany, and China.

LockBit operation targeted over 100 hospitals and healthcare companies, resulting in at least 2,110 victims. The NCA states that despite the group attempted to rebuild its operation, the international law enforcement operation carried out in February severely impacted the gang’s activities.

LockBit created a new leak site to inflate their apparent activity. Since the NCA’s intervention in February, LockBit attacks in the UK have decreased by 73%, with similar reductions reported in other countries. The investigation also provided insight into the group’s operations and network.

The NCA added that of the 194 affiliates identified as using LockBit’s services up until February 2024:

  • 148 built attacks.
  • 119 engaged in negotiations with victims, meaning they definitely deployed attacks.
  • Of the 119 who began negotiations, there are 39 who appear not to have ever received a ransom payment.
  • 75 did not engage in any negotiation, so also appear not to have received any ransom payments.

The US government also charged in the past other five LockBit members, Artur Sungatov, Ivan Kondratyev (Bassterlord), Ruslan Magomedovich AstamirovMikhail Matveev (Wazawaka), and Mikhail Vasiliev.

“These sanctions are hugely significant and show that there is no hiding place for cyber criminals like Dmitry Khoroshev, who wreak havoc across the globe. He was certain he could remain anonymous, but he was wrong.” NCA Director General Graeme Biggar said.

“We know our work to disrupt LockBit thus far has been extremely successful in degrading their capability and credibility among the criminal community. The group’s attempt at rebuilding has resulted in a much less sophisticated enterprise with significantly reduced impact.”

“Today’s announcement puts another huge nail in the LockBit coffin and our investigation into them continues. We are also now targeting affiliates who have used LockBit services to inflict devastating ransomware attacks on schools, hospitals and major companies around the world.”

According to Europol, law enforcement agencies have obtained over 2,500 decryption keys and are contacting the LockBit victims to offer assistance. With Europol’s support, agencies like the Japanese Police, the National Crime Agency, and the FBI have developed decryption tools to recover files encrypted by LockBit ransomware. These tools are now accessible for free on the No More Ransom portal in 37 languages.

“Europol has been exploiting the vast amount of data gathered during the investigation and the first phase of action to identify these victims, who are located all over the world. Its European Cybercrime Centre (EC3) has disseminated some 3 500 intelligence packages containing information about Lockbit victims to 33 countries.” reads the announcement published by Europol.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, cybercrime)

U.S. Charges Russian Man as Boss of LockBit Ransomware Group

7 May 2024 at 17:36

The United States joined the United Kingdom and Australia today in sanctioning 31-year-old Russian national Dmitry Yuryevich Khoroshev as the alleged leader of the infamous ransomware group LockBit. The U.S. Department of Justice also indicted Khoroshev and charged him with using Lockbit to attack more than 2,000 victims and extort at least $100 million in ransomware payments.

Image: U.K. National Crime Agency.

Khoroshev (Дмитрий Юрьевич Хорошев), a resident of Voronezh, Russia, was charged in a 26-count indictment by a grand jury in New Jersey.

“Dmitry Khoroshev conceived, developed, and administered Lockbit, the most prolific ransomware variant and group in the world, enabling himself and his affiliates to wreak havoc and cause billions of dollars in damage to thousands of victims around the globe,” U.S. Attorney Philip R. Sellinger said in a statement released by the Justice Department.

The indictment alleges Khoroshev acted as the LockBit ransomware group’s developer and administrator from its inception in September 2019 through May 2024, and that he typically received a 20 percent share of each ransom payment extorted from LockBit victims.

The government says LockBit victims included individuals, small businesses, multinational corporations, hospitals, schools, nonprofit organizations, critical infrastructure, and government and law-enforcement agencies.

“Khoroshev and his co-conspirators extracted at least $500 million in ransom payments from their victims and caused billions of dollars in broader losses, such as lost revenue, incident response, and recovery,” the DOJ said. “The LockBit ransomware group attacked more than 2,500 victims in at least 120 countries, including 1,800 victims in the United States.”

The unmasking of LockBitSupp comes nearly three months after U.S. and U.K. authorities seized the darknet websites run by LockBit, retrofitting it with press releases about the law enforcement action and free tools to help LockBit victims decrypt infected systems.

The feds used the existing design on LockBit’s victim shaming website to feature press releases and free decryption tools.

One of the blog captions that authorities left on the seized site was a teaser page that read, “Who is LockbitSupp?,” which promised to reveal the true identity of the ransomware group leader. That item featured a countdown clock until the big reveal, but when the site’s timer expired no such details were offered.

Following the FBI’s raid, LockBitSupp took to Russian cybercrime forums to assure his partners and affiliates that the ransomware operation was still fully operational. LockBitSupp also raised another set of darknet websites that soon promised to release data stolen from a number of LockBit victims ransomed prior to the FBI raid.

One of the victims LockBitSupp continued extorting was Fulton County, Ga. Following the FBI raid, LockbitSupp vowed to release sensitive documents stolen from the county court system unless paid a ransom demand before LockBit’s countdown timer expired. But when Fulton County officials refused to pay and the timer expired, no stolen records were ever published. Experts said it was likely the FBI had in fact seized all of LockBit’s stolen data.

LockBitSupp also bragged that their real identity would never be revealed, and at one point offered to pay $10 million to anyone who could discover their real name.

KrebsOnSecurity has been in intermittent contact with LockBitSupp for several months over the course of reporting on different LockBit victims. Reached at the same ToX instant messenger identity that the ransomware group leader has promoted on Russian cybercrime forums, LockBitSupp claimed the authorities named the wrong guy.

“It’s not me,” LockBitSupp replied in Russian. “I don’t understand how the FBI was able to connect me with this poor guy. Where is the logical chain that it is me? Don’t you feel sorry for a random innocent person?”

LockBitSupp, who now has a $10 million bounty for his arrest from the U.S. Department of State, has been known to be flexible with the truth. The Lockbit group routinely practiced “double extortion” against its victims — requiring one ransom payment for a key to unlock hijacked systems, and a separate payment in exchange for a promise to delete data stolen from its victims.

But Justice Department officials say LockBit never deleted its victim data, regardless of whether those organizations paid a ransom to keep the information from being published on LockBit’s victim shaming website.

Khoroshev is the sixth person officially indicted as active members of LockBit. The government says Russian national Artur Sungatov used LockBit ransomware against victims in manufacturing, logistics, insurance and other companies throughout the United States.

Ivan Gennadievich Kondratyev, a.k.a. “Bassterlord,” allegedly deployed LockBit against targets in the United States, Singapore, Taiwan, and Lebanon. Kondratyev is also charged (PDF) with three criminal counts arising from his alleged use of the Sodinokibi (aka “REvil“) ransomware variant to encrypt data, exfiltrate victim information, and extort a ransom payment from a corporate victim based in Alameda County, California.

In May 2023, U.S. authorities unsealed indictments against two alleged LockBit affiliates, Mikhail “Wazawaka” Matveev and Mikhail Vasiliev. In January 2022, KrebsOnSecurity published Who is the Network Access Broker ‘Wazawaka,’ which followed clues from Wazawaka’s many pseudonyms and contact details on the Russian-language cybercrime forums back to a 31-year-old Mikhail Matveev from Abaza, RU.

Matveev remains at large, presumably still in Russia. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of State has a standing $10 million reward offer for information leading to Matveev’s arrest.

Vasiliev, 35, of Bradford, Ontario, Canada, is in custody in Canada awaiting extradition to the United States (the complaint against Vasiliev is at this PDF).

In June 2023, Russian national Ruslan Magomedovich Astamirov was charged in New Jersey for his participation in the LockBit conspiracy, including the deployment of LockBit against victims in Florida, Japan, France, and Kenya. Astamirov is currently in custody in the United States awaiting trial.

The Justice Department is urging victims targeted by LockBit to contact the FBI at https://lockbitvictims.ic3.gov/ to file an official complaint, and to determine whether affected systems can be successfully decrypted.

Russian Hacker Dmitry Khoroshev Unmasked as LockBit Ransomware Administrator

By: Newsroom
7 May 2024 at 15:49
The U.K. National Crime Agency (NCA) has unmasked the administrator and developer of the LockBit ransomware operation, revealing it to be a 31-year-old Russian national named Dmitry Yuryevich Khoroshev. In addition, Khoroshev has been sanctioned by the U.K. Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCD), the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (

MITRE attributes the recent attack to China-linked UNC5221

7 May 2024 at 13:40

MITRE published more details on the recent security breach, including a timeline of the attack and attribution evidence.

MITRE has shared more details on the recent hack, including the new malware involved in the attack and a timeline of the attacker’s activities.

In April 2024, MITRE disclosed a security breach in one of its research and prototyping networks. The security team at the organization promptly launched an investigation, logged out the threat actor, and engaged third-party forensics Incident Response teams to conduct independent analysis in collaboration with internal experts.

According to the MITRE Corporation, a nation-state actor breached its systems in January 2024 by chaining two Ivanti Connect Secure zero-day vulnerabilities (CVE-2023-46805 and CVE-2024-21887).

MITRE spotted a foreign nation-state threat actor probing its Networked Experimentation, Research, and Virtualization Environment (NERVE), used for research and prototyping. The organization immediately started mitigation actions which included taking NERVE offline. The investigation is still ongoing to determine the extent of information involved.

The organization notified authorities and affected parties and is working to restore operational alternatives for collaboration. 

Despite MITRE diligently following industry best practices, implementing vendor recommendations, and complying with government guidance to strengthen, update, and fortify its Ivanti system, they overlooked the lateral movement into their VMware infrastructure.

The organization said that the core enterprise network or partners’ systems were not affected by this incident.

Mitre researchers reported that the indicators of compromise that were observed during the security breach overlap with those Mandiant associated with UNC5221, which is a China-linked APT group.

The state-sponsored hackers first gaining initial access to NERVE on December 31, then they deployed the ROOTROT web shell on

The adversary deployed the ROOTROT web shell on Internet-facing Ivanti appliances.

On January 4, 2024, the threat actors conducted a reconnaissance on NERVE environment. They accessed vCenter through a compromised Ivanti appliance and communicated with multiple ESXi hosts. The attackers used hijacked credentials to log into several accounts via RDP and accessed user bookmarks and file shares to probe the network.

Then the nation-state actors manipulated VMs to compromise the overall infrastructure.

“The adversary manipulated VMs and established control over the infrastructure. The adversary used compromised administrative credentials, authenticated from an internal NERVE IP address, indicating lateral movement within the NERVE.” reads the update published by Mitre. “They attempted to enable SSH and attempted to destroy one of their own VMs as well as POSTed to /ui/list/export and downloaded a file demonstrating a sophisticated attempt to conceal their presence and maintain persistence within the network.”

On January 7, 3034, the adversary accessed VMs and deployed malicious payloads, including the BRICKSTORM backdoor and a web shell tracked as BEEFLUSH, enabling persistent access and arbitrary command execution.

The hackers relied on SSH manipulation and script execution to maintain control over the compromised systems. Mitre noted attackers exploiting a default VMware account to list drives and generate new VMs, one of which was removed on the same day. BRICKSTORM was discovered in directories with local persistence setups, communicating with designated C2 domains. BEEFLUSH interacted with internal IP addresses, executing dubious scripts and commands from the vCenter server’s /tmp directory

In the following days, the threat actors deployed additional payloads on the target infrastrcuture, including the WIREFIRE (aka GIFTEDVISITOR) web shell, and the BUSHWALK webshell for data exfiltration.

Between mid-February and mid-March, before MITRE discovered the security breach in April, threat actors maintained persistence in the NERVE environment and attempted lateral movement. The organization pointed out that the nation-state actors failed to compromise other resources. 

“Despite unsuccessful attempts to pivot to other resources, the adversary persisted in accessing other virtual environments within Center.” concludes the update that includes malware analysis and Indicators of Compromise for the involved payloads. “The adversary executed a ping command for one of MITRE’s corporate domain controllers and attempted to move laterally into MITRE systems but was unsuccessful.”

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, China)

APT42 Hackers Pose as Journalists to Harvest Credentials and Access Cloud Data

By: Newsroom
7 May 2024 at 13:25
The Iranian state-backed hacking outfit called APT42 is making use of enhanced social engineering schemes to infiltrate target networks and cloud environments. Targets of the attack include Western and Middle Eastern NGOs, media organizations, academia, legal services and activists, Google Cloud subsidiary Mandiant said in a report published last week. "APT42 was

China-Linked Hackers Used ROOTROT Webshell in MITRE Network Intrusion

By: Newsroom
7 May 2024 at 12:55
The MITRE Corporation has offered more details into the recently disclosed cyber attack, stating that the first evidence of the intrusion now dates back to December 31, 2023. The attack, which came to light last month, singled out MITRE's Networked Experimentation, Research, and Virtualization Environment (NERVE) through the exploitation of two Ivanti Connect Secure zero-day

New Case Study: The Malicious Comment

7 May 2024 at 10:42
How safe is your comments section? Discover how a seemingly innocent 'thank you' comment on a product page concealed a malicious vulnerability, underscoring the necessity of robust security measures. Read the full real-life case study here.  When is a ‘Thank you’ not a ‘Thank you’? When it’s a sneaky bit of code that’s been hidden inside a ‘Thank You’

Google Simplifies 2-Factor Authentication Setup (It's More Important Than Ever)

By: Newsroom
7 May 2024 at 10:02
Google on Monday announced that it's simplifying the process of enabling two-factor authentication (2FA) for users with personal and Workspace accounts. Also called 2-Step Verification (2SV), it aims to add an extra layer of security to users' accounts to prevent takeover attacks in case the passwords are stolen. The new change entails adding a second step method, such as an

Russian Operator of BTC-e Crypto Exchange Pleads Guilty to Money Laundering

By: Newsroom
7 May 2024 at 09:32
A Russian operator of a now-dismantled BTC-e cryptocurrency exchange has pleaded guilty to money laundering charges from 2011 to 2017. Alexander Vinnik, 44, was charged in January 2017 and taken into custody in Greece in July 2017. He was subsequently extradited to the U.S. in August 2022. Vinnik and his co-conspirators have been accused of owning and managing

Alexander Vinnik, the operator of BTC-e exchange, pleaded guilty to money laundering

7 May 2024 at 06:59

Alexander Vinnik, a Russian operator of virtual currency exchange BTC-e pleaded guilty to participating in a money laundering scheme.

Alexander Vinnik, a Russian national, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering for his involvement in operating the cryptocurrency exchange BTC-e from 2011 to 2017. BTC-e processed over $9 billion in transactions and served over one million users globally, including many in the United States. In July 2017 law enforcement shut down the virtual currency exchange.

Greek Police arrested the Russian national in 2017, and they accused the man of running the BTC-e Bitcoin exchange to launder billions worth of cryptocurrency.

The virtual currency exchange received criminal proceeds from various illegal activities, including computer intrusions, ransomware attacks, identity theft, corruption, and drug distribution.

Vinnik promoted unlawful activities carried out through BTC-e and was responsible for at least $121 million in losses.

“BTC-e had no anti-money laundering (AML) and/or “know-your-customer” (KYC) processes and policies in place, as federal law also requires. BTC-e collected virtually no customer data at all, which made the exchange attractive to those who desired to conceal criminal proceeds from law enforcement.” reads the press release published by DoJ. “BTC-e relied on shell companies and affiliate entities that were similarly unregistered with FinCEN and lacked basic anti-money laundering and KYC policies to electronically transfer fiat currency in and out of BTC-e. Vinnik set up numerous such shell companies and financial accounts across the globe to allow BTC-e to conduct its business.” 

In July 2018, a Greek lower court agreed to extradite Vinnik to France to face charges of hacking, money laundering, extortion, and involvement in organized crime.

French authorities accused Vinnik of defrauding more than 100 people in six French cities between 2016 and 2018.

French prosecutors revealed that among the 188 victims of the Vinnik’s attacks, there were local authorities, businesses, and individuals across the world.

In June, New Zealand police had frozen NZ$140 million (US$90 million) in assets linked to a Russian cyber criminal. New Zealand police had worked closely with the US Internal Revenue Service on the case and the investigation is still ongoing.

Vinnik denied charges of extortion and money laundering and did not answer magistrates’ questions, his lawyer also announced that is evaluating whether to appeal.

French prosecutors believe Vinnik was one of the authors of the Locky ransomware that was also employed in attacks on French businesses and organizations between 2016 and 2018.

At his trial, Vinnik explained that he was not the kingpin of the organization, he claimed t have served only as a technical operator executing the instructions of BTC-e directors.

Vinnik was convicted of money laundering but prosecutors didn’t find enough evidence to convict him of extortion.

“The court convicted Vinnik of money laundering but didn’t find enough evidence to convict him of extortion, and stopped short of the 10-year jail term and 750,000 euros in fines that prosecutors had requested.” reported the Associated Press.

“One of his French lawyers, Ariane Zimra, said his conviction for money laundering “doesn’t make sense,” arguing that cryptocurrency is not legally considered “money.”

Subsequently, Vinnik returned to Greece before being extradited to the U.S..

“Today’s result shows how the Justice Department, working with international partners, reaches across the globe to combat cryptocrime,” said Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco. “This guilty plea reflects the Department’s ongoing commitment to use all tools to fight money laundering, police crypto markets, and recover restitution for victims.”

In February, the U.S. charged Aliaksandr Klimenka, a Belarusian and Cypriot national linked with the cryptocurrency exchange BTC-e. The man is facing charges of money laundering conspiracy and operation of an unlicensed money services business.

According to the indictment, Klimenka allegedly controlled the platform BTC-e with Alexander Vinnik and others. Klimenka also allegedly controlled a technology services company named Soft-FX, and the financial company FX Open. 

The servers that were hosting the BTC-e were maintained in the United States, and according to the DoJ, they were allegedly leased to and maintained by Klimenka and Soft-FX.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Alexander Vinnik)

Before yesterdaySecurity News

Last Week in Security (LWiS) - 2024-05-06

By: Erik
7 May 2024 at 03:59

Last Week in Security is a summary of the interesting cybersecurity news, techniques, tools and exploits from the past week. This post covers 2024-04-29 to 2024-05-06.

News

Techniques and Write-ups

Tools and Exploits

  • okta-terrify - Okta Verify and Okta FastPass Abuse Tool.
  • cognito-scanner - A simple script which implements different Cognito attacks such as Account Oracle or Privilege Escalation.
  • KExecDD - Admin to Kernel code execution using the KSecDD driver.
  • Python-Beacon - Python files to aide with shellcode execution.
  • PPPwn - PPPwn - PlayStation 4 PPPoE RCE.
  • SharpGraphView - Microsoft Graph API post-exploitation toolkit.
  • symbolizer-rs - A fast execution trace symbolizer for Windows that runs on all major platforms and doesn't depend on any Microsoft libraries.

New to Me and Miscellaneous

This section is for news, techniques, write-ups, tools, and off-topic items that weren't released last week but are new to me. Perhaps you missed them too!

  • Hypervisor-Detection - Detects virtual machines and malware analysis environments.
  • wstunnel - Tunnel all your traffic over Websocket or HTTP2 - Bypass firewalls/DPI - Static binary available.
  • puter - 🌐 The Internet OS! Free, Open-Source, and Self-Hostable.
  • Installomator - Installation script to deploy standard software on Macs.
  • blint - BLint is a Binary Linter to check the security properties, and capabilities in your executables. Since v2, blint is also an SBOM generator for binaries.
  • (The) Postman Carries Lots of Secrets Don't sleep on Postman secrets!
  • QCSuper - QCSuper is a tool communicating with Qualcomm-based phones and modems, allowing to capture raw 2G/3G/4G radio frames, among other things.
  • proxybroker2 - The New (auto rotate) Proxy [Finder | Checker | Server]. HTTP(S) & SOCKS 🎭.
  • JS-Tap - JavaScript payload and supporting software to be used as XSS payload or post exploitation implant to monitor users as they use the targeted application. Also includes a C2 for executing custom JavaScript payloads in clients.
  • git-rotate - Leveraging GitHub Actions to rotate IP addresses during password spraying attacks to bypass IP-Based blocking.

Techniques, tools, and exploits linked in this post are not reviewed for quality or safety. Do your own research and testing.

City of Wichita hit by a ransomware attack

6 May 2024 at 13:43

The City of Wichita in Kansas was forced to shut down its computer systems after a ransomware attack.

The City of Wichita, Kansas, was the victim of a ransomware attack and shut down its network to contain the threat.

The security breach took place on May 5th, 2024, and immediately started its incident response procedure to prevent the threat from spreading.

The City is investigating and containing the incident with the help of third-party security experts and federal and local law enforcement authorities.

“We regret to report that certain online City services may be unavailable as we thoroughly review and assess an incident that affected some of our computer systems. As part of this assessment, we turned off our computer network.” reads the security breach notification. “This decision was not made lightly but was necessary to ensure that systems are securely vetted before returning to service.”

The City warns that some services may be temporarily unavailable while systems are offline.

City of Wichita is still investigating the scope of the incident and has yet to determine if the company has suffered a data breach.

The City hasn’t disclosed the family of ransomware that infected its systems and the name of the extortion gang behind the attack.

“We are working with specialists to thoroughly review and assess systems before putting them back online. Systems will be restored on a staggered basis to minimize disruptions. We do not have a definitive timeline for returning all systems to production.” the city noted.

“This [the name of the group that is claiming responsibility for the attack] is not being shared for operational security purposes.” states the report.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, City of Wichita)

Why Your VPN May Not Be As Secure As It Claims

6 May 2024 at 14:24

Virtual private networking (VPN) companies market their services as a way to prevent anyone from snooping on your Internet usage. But new research suggests this is a dangerous assumption when connecting to a VPN via an untrusted network, because attackers on the same network could force a target’s traffic off of the protection provided by their VPN without triggering any alerts to the user.

Image: Shutterstock.

When a device initially tries to connect to a network, it broadcasts a message to the entire local network stating that it is requesting an Internet address. Normally, the only system on the network that notices this request and replies is the router responsible for managing the network to which the user is trying to connect.

The machine on a network responsible for fielding these requests is called a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server, which will issue time-based leases for IP addresses. The DHCP server also takes care of setting a specific local address — known as an Internet gateway — that all connecting systems will use as a primary route to the Web.

VPNs work by creating a virtual network interface that serves as an encrypted tunnel for communications. But researchers at Leviathan Security say they’ve discovered it’s possible to abuse an obscure feature built into the DHCP standard so that other users on the local network are forced to connect to a rogue DHCP server.

“Our technique is to run a DHCP server on the same network as a targeted VPN user and to also set our DHCP configuration to use itself as a gateway,” Leviathan researchers Lizzie Moratti and Dani Cronce wrote. “When the traffic hits our gateway, we use traffic forwarding rules on the DHCP server to pass traffic through to a legitimate gateway while we snoop on it.”

The feature being abused here is known as DHCP option 121, and it allows a DHCP server to set a route on the VPN user’s system that is more specific than those used by most VPNs. Abusing this option, Leviathan found, effectively gives an attacker on the local network the ability to set up routing rules that have a higher priority than the routes for the virtual network interface that the target’s VPN creates.

“Pushing a route also means that the network traffic will be sent over the same interface as the DHCP server instead of the virtual network interface,” the Leviathan researchers said. “This is intended functionality that isn’t clearly stated in the RFC [standard]. Therefore, for the routes we push, it is never encrypted by the VPN’s virtual interface but instead transmitted by the network interface that is talking to the DHCP server. As an attacker, we can select which IP addresses go over the tunnel and which addresses go over the network interface talking to our DHCP server.”

Leviathan found they could force VPNs on the local network that already had a connection to arbitrarily request a new one. In this well-documented tactic, known as a DHCP starvation attack, an attacker floods the DHCP server with requests that consume all available IP addresses that can be allocated. Once the network’s legitimate DHCP server is completely tied up, the attacker can then have their rogue DHCP server respond to all pending requests.

“This technique can also be used against an already established VPN connection once the VPN user’s host needs to renew a lease from our DHCP server,” the researchers wrote. “We can artificially create that scenario by setting a short lease time in the DHCP lease, so the user updates their routing table more frequently. In addition, the VPN control channel is still intact because it already uses the physical interface for its communication. In our testing, the VPN always continued to report as connected, and the kill switch was never engaged to drop our VPN connection.”

The researchers say their methods could be used by an attacker who compromises a DHCP server or wireless access point, or by a rogue network administrator who owns the infrastructure themselves and maliciously configures it. Alternatively, an attacker could set up an “evil twin” wireless hotspot that mimics the signal broadcast by a legitimate provider.

ANALYSIS

Bill Woodcock is executive director at Packet Clearing House, a nonprofit based in San Francisco. Woodcock said Option 121 has been included in the DHCP standard since 2002, which means the attack described by Leviathan has technically been possible for the last 22 years.

“They’re realizing now that this can be used to circumvent a VPN in a way that’s really problematic, and they’re right,” Woodcock said.

Woodcock said anyone who might be a target of spear phishing attacks should be very concerned about using VPNs on an untrusted network.

“Anyone who is in a position of authority or maybe even someone who is just a high net worth individual, those are all very reasonable targets of this attack,” he said. “If I were trying to do an attack against someone at a relatively high security company and I knew where they typically get their coffee or sandwich at twice a week, this is a very effective tool in that toolbox. I’d be a little surprised if it wasn’t already being exploited in that way, because again this isn’t rocket science. It’s just thinking a little outside the box.”

Successfully executing this attack on a network likely would not allow an attacker to see all of a target’s traffic or browsing activity. That’s because for the vast majority of the websites visited by the target, the content is encrypted (the site’s address begins with https://). However, an attacker would still be able to see the metadata — such as the source and destination addresses — of any traffic flowing by.

KrebsOnSecurity shared Leviathan’s research with John Kristoff, founder of dataplane.org and a PhD candidate in computer science at the University of Illinois Chicago. Kristoff said practically all user-edge network gear, including WiFi deployments, support some form of rogue DHCP server detection and mitigation, but that it’s unclear how widely deployed those protections are in real-world environments.

“However, and I think this is a key point to emphasize, an untrusted network is an untrusted network, which is why you’re usually employing the VPN in the first place,” Kristoff said. “If [the] local network is inherently hostile and has no qualms about operating a rogue DHCP server, then this is a sneaky technique that could be used to de-cloak some traffic – and if done carefully, I’m sure a user might never notice.”

MITIGATIONS

According to Leviathan, there are several ways to minimize the threat from rogue DHCP servers on an unsecured network. One is using a device powered by the Android operating system, which apparently ignores DHCP option 121.

Relying on a temporary wireless hotspot controlled by a cellular device you own also effectively blocks this attack.

“They create a password-locked LAN with automatic network address translation,” the researchers wrote of cellular hot-spots. “Because this network is completely controlled by the cellular device and requires a password, an attacker should not have local network access.”

Leviathan’s Moratti said another mitigation is to run your VPN from inside of a virtual machine (VM) — like Parallels, VMware or VirtualBox. VPNs run inside of a VM are not vulnerable to this attack, Moratti said, provided they are not run in “bridged mode,” which causes the VM to replicate another node on the network.

In addition, a technology called “deep packet inspection” can be used to deny all in- and outbound traffic from the physical interface except for the DHCP and the VPN server. However, Leviathan says this approach opens up a potential “side channel” attack that could be used to determine the destination of traffic.

“This could be theoretically done by performing traffic analysis on the volume a target user sends when the attacker’s routes are installed compared to the baseline,” they wrote. “In addition, this selective denial-of-service is unique as it could be used to censor specific resources that an attacker doesn’t want a target user to connect to even while they are using the VPN.”

Moratti said Leviathan’s research shows that many VPN providers are currently making promises to their customers that their technology can’t keep.

“VPNs weren’t designed to keep you more secure on your local network, but to keep your traffic more secure on the Internet,” Moratti said. “When you start making assurances that your product protects people from seeing your traffic, there’s an assurance or promise that can’t be met.”

A copy of Leviathan’s research, along with code intended to allow others to duplicate their findings in a lab environment, is available here.

Critical Tinyproxy Flaw Opens Over 50,000 Hosts to Remote Code Execution

By: Newsroom
6 May 2024 at 14:00
More than 50% of the 90,310 hosts have been found exposing a Tinyproxy service on the internet that's vulnerable to a critical unpatched security flaw in the HTTP/HTTPS proxy tool. The issue, tracked as CVE-2023-49606, carries a CVSS score of 9.8 out of a maximum of 10, per Cisco Talos, which described it as a use-after-free bug impacting versions 1.10.0 and 1.11.1, the latter of

China-Linked Hackers Suspected in ArcaneDoor Cyberattacks Targeting Network Devices

By: Newsroom
6 May 2024 at 13:47
The recently uncovered cyber espionage campaign targeting perimeter network devices from several vendors, including Cisco, may have been the work of China-linked actors, according to new findings from attack surface management firm Censys. Dubbed ArcaneDoor, the activity is said to have commenced around July 2023, with the first confirmed attack against an unnamed victim

El Salvador suffered a massive leak of biometric data

6 May 2024 at 10:44

Resecurity found a massive leak involving the exposure of personally identifiable information (PII) of over five million citizens of El Salvador on the Dark Web.

Resecurity identified a massive leak of the personally identifiable information (PII) of over five million citizens from El Salvador on the Dark Web, impacting more than 80% of the country’s population.

The threat actor, going by the alias ‘CiberinteligenciaSV,’ posted the 144 GB data dump to Breach Forums, writing that the leak included 5,129,518 high-definition photos, each labeled with the corresponding Salvadorian’s document identification (DUI) number. Resecurity assesses that the real intellectual authors of this breach appear to have an interest in obscuring their involvement, using the background specter of the Guacamaya group and its unofficial proxies to form a cloud of uncertainty surrounding the real threat actors and attack chain that caused the data leak.

The data dump includes the following fields:

– ID
– Identification document (DUI)
– Names/Last names
– Date of birth
– Telephone
– Email
– Address
– Photo of the victim

Ultimately, this data leak is significant because it marks one of the first instances in cybercrime history where virtually the entire population of a country has been affected by a compromise of biometric data. A Federal Trade Commission advisory published last year states, “Biometric information refers to data that depict or describe physical, biological, or behavioral traits, characteristics, or measurements of or relating to an identified or identifiable person’s body.”

Beyond the massive scale of Salvadorian PII records, threat actors also obtained a headshot of each victim, which represents a crucial biometric data marker – particularly in the golden age of generative AI. Notably, the vast scale of this biometric and PII data breach places most of El Salvador’s population at significant risk for identity theft and fraud. Armed with modern deep fake technology, threat actors can leverage victim headshots and related PII to stage more convincing frauds across a broad universe of digital-first financial, merchant, and government portals.

The detailed report is available here:

https://www.resecurity.com/blog/article/massive-dump-of-hacked-salvadorean-headshots-and-pii-highlights-growing-threat-actor-interest-in-biometric-data

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, El Salvador)

It Costs How Much?!? The Financial Pitfalls of Cyberattacks on SMBs

6 May 2024 at 11:00
Cybercriminals are vipers. They’re like snakes in the grass, hiding behind their keyboards, waiting to strike. And if you're a small- and medium-sized business (SMB), your organization is the ideal lair for these serpents to slither into.  With cybercriminals becoming more sophisticated, SMBs like you must do more to protect themselves. But at what price? That’s the daunting question

Xiaomi Android Devices Hit by Multiple Flaws Across Apps and System Components

By: Newsroom
6 May 2024 at 10:03
Multiple security vulnerabilities have been disclosed in various applications and system components within Xiaomi devices running Android. "The vulnerabilities in Xiaomi led to access to arbitrary activities, receivers and services with system privileges, theft of arbitrary files with system privileges, [and] disclosure of phone, settings and Xiaomi account data," mobile security firm

Finland authorities warn of Android malware campaign targeting bank users

6 May 2024 at 06:50

Finland’s Transport and Communications Agency (Traficom) warned about an ongoing Android malware campaign targeting bank accounts.

Traficom, Finland’s Transport and Communications Agency, issued a warning regarding a current Android malware campaign aimed at bank accounts.

Traficom reported that clients of multiple banks received text messages in the Finnish language that instruct recipients to call a service number, from which the bank user is directed to install malware on the Android device. Threat actors used a phone number that seems to be the number of a domestic telecom operator or a local network.

The text messages purportedly from various companies, claiming debt collection or unusual account activity. The messages urge recipients to call a specified service number. Upon calling, recipients are warned of potential fraud and recommended to secure their device by downloading an antivirus software. Then the victims receive a follow-up text message containing a link to a security software which is actually malware disguised as McAfee antivirus. Once installed, the malware grants access to the victim’s applications and messages, including online banking, allowing crooks to steal funds from the victim’s online bank.

“According to reports received by the Cyber ​​Security Center, targets have been advised to download the McAfee application. The download link offers the installation of an .apk application intended for Android devices that can be downloaded from outside the application store.” reads the alert published by the Traficom. “However, it is not an anti-virus software, but a malware that can be installed on the phone. With the help of the malware, the criminal can access the phone’s applications and messages, including online banking. The criminal uses malware to steal money from the victim’s online bank.”

Android malware

The alert remarks that banks or authorities do not call the customer and ask to hand over online service credentials, make payments, or install applications from outside the app store on the device.

The ongoing campaign is only targeting Android users, Traficom is not aware of attacks against iPhone users.

Below is the list of recommended actions for those recipients who have installed the malware:

1. Contact your bank. If you used a banking application or processed credit card information on an infected device, contact your bank immediately to limit the damage.

2. Reset the device to factory settings. When restoring from a backup, you must ensure that a backup that was created before the malware was installed is restored to the device. In some cases, restoring to factory settings may not be possible. If restoring to factory settings does not work, we recommend contacting the seller of the device.

3. Protect your user account. Change passwords for services you’ve used on your device. The malware may have stolen your password if you have logged into the service after installing the malware.

4. File a criminal report with the police. File a criminal complaint about financial losses.

The Finnish OP Financial Group also issued an alert about the ongoing Android malware campaign.

“Criminals send text messages in the name of companies urging them to call the service number immediately. If you call the given number and click on the link received via text message during the call, the criminal can install malware on the phone.” reads the alert.

Both Traficom and OP Financial Group haven’t shared technical details about the malware family that targeted the bank users.

Google has previously confirmed to BleepingComputer that Android’s in-built anti-malware tool, Play Protect, automatically protects against known versions of Vultur, so keeping it active at all times is crucial.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Android malware)

New 'Cuckoo' Persistent macOS Spyware Targeting Intel and Arm Macs

By: Newsroom
6 May 2024 at 07:48
Cybersecurity researchers have discovered a new information stealer targeting Apple macOS systems that's designed to set up persistence on the infected hosts and act as a spyware. Dubbed Cuckoo by Kandji, the malware is a universal Mach-O binary that's capable of running on both Intel- and Arm-based Macs. The exact distribution vector is currently unclear, although there are

Ransomware drama: Law enforcement seized Lockbit group’s website again

5 May 2024 at 22:46

Law enforcement seized the Lockbit group’s Tor website again and announced they will reveal more identities of its operators

Law enforcement seized the Lockbit group’s Tor website again. The authorities resumed the Lockbit seized leak site and mocked its administrators.

According to the countdown active on the seized, law enforcement that are currently controlling the website will reveal the identities of the LockBitSupps and other members of the gang on May 7, 2024, at 14:00:00 UTC.

#LOCKBIT SEIZED LEAK SITE RESURRECTED!!! And it LockBitSupps days of anonymity are numbered! Countdown to revealing who he is has started. This time, I don’t think we will be disappointed! It’s coming ON 2024-05-07 14:00:00 UTC!!!#FuckRansomware pic.twitter.com/uD09m7AukH

— Jon DiMaggio (@Jon__DiMaggio) May 5, 2024
Lockbit

However, researchers at VX-underground have spoken with Lockbit ransomware group administrative staff regarding the return of the old domain and the gang claims law enforcement is lying.

“I don’t understand why they’re putting on this little show. They’re clearly upset we continue to work.” Lockbit told vx-underground.

Lockbit confirmed that their operation is still active and will continue to “bring” new victims.

Today we spoke with Lockbit ransomware group administrative staff regarding the return of the old domain and new messages from FBI, NCA UK, and EURPOL.

Lockbit ransomware group states law enforcement is lying.

Lockbit also said and quote: "I don't understand why they're…

— vx-underground (@vxunderground) May 5, 2024

In February, a joint law enforcement action, code-named Operation Cronos, conducted by law enforcement agencies from 11 countries disrupted the LockBit ransomware operation.

The operation led to the arrest of two members of the ransomware gang in Poland and Ukraine and the seizure of hundreds of crypto wallets used by the group.

The British NCA took control of LockBit’s central administration environment used by the RaaS affiliates to carry out the cyberattacks. The authorities also seized the dark web Tor leak site used by the group.

The Tor leak site was seized by the NCA and was used to publish updates on the law enforcement operation and provide support to the victims of the gang.

The NCA also obtained the source code of the LockBit platform and a huge trove of information on the group’s operation, including information on affiliates and supporters.

Law enforcement also had access to data stolen from the victims of the ransomware operation, a circumstance that highlights the fact that even when a ransom is paid, the ransomware gang often fails to delete the stolen information.

The NCA and its global partners have secured over 1,000 decryption keys that will allow victims of the gang to recover their files for free. The NCA will reach out to victims based in the UK in the coming days and weeks, providing support to help them recover encrypted data.

However a few days later, the LockBit gang relaunched its RaaS operation, the group set up a new infrastructure and threatened to carry out cyber attacks on the government sector.

“Very simple, that I need to attack the .gov sector more often and more, it is after such attacks that the FBI will be forced to show me weaknesses and vulnerabilities and make me stronger. By attacking the .gov sector you can know exactly if the FBI has the ability to attack us or not.” wrote the gang.

In a few days, the gang added tens of entries to its website, but only a few of them are new victims of the group. It seems that the group is re-populating its tor leak site.

At the end of February, the gang fully recovered its operations.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, cybercrime)

NATO and the EU formally condemned Russia-linked APT28 cyber espionage

5 May 2024 at 14:18

NATO and the European Union formally condemned cyber espionage operations carried out by the Russia-linked APT28 against European countries.

NATO and the European Union condemned cyber espionage operations carried out by the Russia-linked threat actor APT28 (aka “Forest Blizzard”, “Fancybear” or “Strontium”) against European countries.

This week the Federal Government condemned in the strongest possible terms the long-term espionage campaign conducted by the group APT28 that targeted the Executive Committee of the Social Democratic Party of Germany.

“The Federal Government’s national attribution procedure regarding this campaign has concluded that, for a relatively long period, the cyber actor APT28 used a critical vulnerability in Microsoft Outlook that remained unidentified at the time to compromise numerous email accounts.” reads the announcement published by the German Bundesregierung.

The nation-state actor exploited the zero-day flaw CVE-2023-23397 in attacks against European entities since April 2022. The Russia-linked APT also targeted NATO entities and Ukrainian government agencies.

The vulnerability is a Microsoft Outlook spoofing vulnerability that can lead to an authentication bypass.

In December 2023, Palo Alto Networks’ Unit 42 researchers reported that the group APT28 group exploited the CVE-2023-23397 vulnerability in attacks aimed at European NATO members.

The experts highlighted that over the previous 20 months, the APT group targeted at least 30 organizations within 14 nations that are probably of strategic intelligence significance to the Russian government and its military.

In March 2023, Microsoft published guidance for investigating attacks exploiting the patched Outlook vulnerability tracked as CVE-2023-23397.

In attacks spotted by Microsoft’s Threat Intelligence at the end of 2023, the nation-state actor primarily targeted government, energy, transportation, and non-governmental organizations in the US, Europe, and the Middle East.

According to Unit 42, APT28 started exploiting the above vulnerability in March 2022.

“During this time, Fighting Ursa conducted at least two campaigns with this vulnerability that have been made public. The first occurred between March-December 2022 and the second occurred in March 2023.” reads the report published by the company.

“Unit 42 researchers discovered a third, recently active campaign in which Fighting Ursa also used this vulnerability. The group conducted this most recent campaign between September-October 2023, targeting at least nine organizations in seven nations.”

APT28 Outllok exploit

The researchers pointed out that in the second and third campaigns, the nation-state actor continued to use a publicly known exploit for the Outlook flaw. This implies that the benefits of the access and intelligence produced by these operations were deemed more significant than the potential consequences of being discovered.

The list of targets is very long and includes:

  1. Other than Ukraine, all of the targeted European nations are current members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
  2. at least one NATO Rapid Deployable Corps
  3. critical infrastructure-related organizations within the following sectors:
    1. Energy
    2. Transportation
    3. Telecommunications
    4. Information technology
    5. Military industrial base

Microsoft’s Threat Intelligence also warned of Russia-linked cyber-espionage group APT28 actively exploiting the CVE-2023-23397 Outlook flaw to hijack Microsoft Exchange accounts and steal sensitive information.

In October, the French National Agency for the Security of Information Systems ANSSI (Agence Nationale de la sécurité des systèmes d’information) warned that the Russia-linked APT28 group has been targeting multiple French organizations, including government entities, businesses, universities, and research institutes and think tanks.

The French agency noticed that the threat actors used different techniques to avoid detection, including the compromise of low-risk equipment monitored and located at the edge of the target networks. The Government experts pointed out that in some cases the group did not deployed any backdoor in the compromised systems.

ANSSI observed at least three attack techniques employed by APT28 in the attacks against French organizations:

  • searching for zero-day vulnerabilities [T1212, T1587.004];
  • compromise of routers and personal email accounts [T1584.005, T1586.002];
  • the use of open source tools and online services [T1588.002, T1583.006]. ANSSI investigations confirm that APT28 exploited the Outlook 0-day vulnerability CVE-2023-23397. According to other partners, over this period, the MOA also exploited other vulnerabilities, such as that affecting Microsoft Windows Support Diagnostic Tool (MSDT, CVE-2022-30190, also called Follina) as well as
    than those targeting the Roundcube application (CVE-2020-12641, CVE-2020-35730, CVE-2021-44026).

According to the recent announcement published by the German government, the APT28 campaign targeted government authorities, logistics companies, armaments, the air and space industry, IT services, foundations, and associations in Germany, other European countries, and Ukraine. This group was also responsible for the 2015 cyber attack on the German Bundestag. These actions violate international cyber norms and require particular attention, especially during election years in many countries.

The Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs also condemned long-term cyber espionage activities by the group APT28. The Ministry’s statement also confirmed that Czech institutions have been targeted by the Russia-linked APT28 exploiting the Microsoft Outlook zero-day from 2023

“Based on information from intelligence services, some Czech institutions have also been the target of cyber attacks exploiting a previously unknown vulnerability in Microsoft Outlook from 2023. The mode of operation and the focus of these attacks matched the profile of the actor APT28.” reads the announcement. “Affected subjects were offered technical recommendations and cooperation to enhance security measures. The actor APT28 has also been the subject to active measures in Czechia as part of the global operation Dying Ember.”

NATO issued similar statements, the Council of the European Union and the governments of the United States and the United Kingdom.

“The European Union and its Member States, together with international partners, strongly condemn the malicious cyber campaign conducted by the Russia-controlled Advanced Persistent Threat Actor 28 (APT28) against Germany and Czechia.” states the Council of the European Union.

“Russia’s pattern of behavior blatantly disregards the Framework for Responsible State Behavior in Cyberspace, as affirmed by all United Nations Member States.  The United States is committed to the security of our allies and partners and upholding the rules-based international order, including in cyberspace.” reads the statement published by the US government. “We call on Russia to stop this malicious activity and abide by its international commitments and obligations.  With the EU and our NATO Allies, we will continue to take action to disrupt Russia’s cyber activities, protect our citizens and foreign partners, and hold malicious actors accountable.”

The APT28 group (aka Fancy BearPawn StormSofacy GroupSednit, BlueDelta, and STRONTIUM) has been active since at least 2007 and it has targeted governments, militaries, and security organizations worldwide. The group was involved also in the string of attacks that targeted 2016 Presidential election.

The group operates out of military unity 26165 of the Russian General Staff Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) 85th Main Special Service Center (GTsSS).

Most of the APT28s’ campaigns leveraged spear-phishing and malware-based attacks.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Russia)

Security Affairs newsletter Round 470 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION

5 May 2024 at 12:25

A new round of the weekly SecurityAffairs newsletter arrived! Every week the best security articles from Security Affairs are free for you in your email box.

Enjoy a new round of the weekly SecurityAffairs newsletter, including the international press.

Blackbasta gang claimed responsibility for Synlab Italia attack
LockBit published data stolen from Simone Veil hospital in Cannes
Russia-linked APT28 and crooks are still using the Moobot botnet
Dirty stream attack poses billions of Android installs at risk
ZLoader Malware adds Zeus’s anti-analysis feature
Ukrainian REvil gang member sentenced to 13 years in prison
Pro-Russia hackers target critical infrastructure in North America and Europe
HPE Aruba Networking addressed four critical ArubaOS RCE flaws
Threat actors hacked the Dropbox Sign production environment
CISA adds GitLab flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog
Panda Restaurant Group disclosed a data breach
Ex-NSA employee sentenced to 262 months in prison for attempting to transfer classified documents to Russia
Cuttlefish malware targets enterprise-grade SOHO routers
A flaw in the R programming language could allow code execution
Muddling Meerkat, a mysterious DNS Operation involving China’s Great Firewall
Notorious Finnish Hacker sentenced to more than six years in prisonBlackbasta gang claimed responsibility for Synlab Italia attack
CISA guidelines to protect critical infrastructure against AI-based threats
NCSC: New UK law bans default passwords on smart devices
The FCC imposes $200 million in fines on four US carriers for unlawfully sharing user location data
Google prevented 2.28 million policy-violating apps from being published on Google Play in 2023
Financial Business and Consumer Solutions (FBCS) data breach impacted 2M individuals
Cyber-Partisans hacktivists claim to have breached Belarus KGB
The Los Angeles County Department of Health Services disclosed a data breach
Multiple Brocade SANnav SAN Management SW flaws allow device compromise
ICICI Bank exposed credit card data of 17000 customers
Okta warns of unprecedented scale in credential stuffing attacks on online services
Targeted operation against Ukraine exploited 7-year-old MS Office bug

International Press – Newsletter

Cybercrime    

Man Who Mass-Extorted Psychotherapy Patients Gets Six Years 

Panda Restaurants discloses data breach after corporate systems hack

UnitedHealth CEO Says Hackers Lurked in Network for Nine Days Before Ransomware Strike

Sodinokibi/REvil Affiliate Sentenced for Role in $700M Ransomware Scheme      

Cybersecurity consultant arrested after allegedly extorting IT firm

Cannes Simone Veil hospital center – CYBER ​​ATTACK PRESS RELEASE  

Malware

2024 Bad Bot Report  

Dragos Industrial Ransomware Analysis: Q1 2024  

Malware: Cuckoo Behaves Like Cross Between Infostealer and Spyware  

Eight Arms To Hold You: The Cuttlefish Malware  

Zloader Learns Old Tricks  

Router Roulette: Cybercriminals and Nation-States Sharing Compromised Networks   

Hacking 

How to Block Residential Proxies using Okta  

AI models inch closer to hacking on their own   

Hackers use developing countries as testing ground for new ransomware attacks  

Hackers claim to have infiltrated Belarus’ main security service 

R-BITRARY CODE EXECUTION: VULNERABILITY IN R’S DESERIALIZATION  

A recent security incident involving Dropbox Sign

DEFENDING OT OPERATIONS AGAINST ONGOING PRO-RUSSIA HACKTIVIST ACTIVITY

“Dirty stream” attack: Discovering and mitigating a common vulnerability pattern in Android apps  

Intelligence and Information Warfare 

Germany grapples with wave of spying threats from Russia and China   

A CUNNING OPERATOR: MUDDLING MEERKAT AND CHINA’S GREAT FIREWALL 

Former NSA Employee Sentenced to Over 21 Years in Prison for Attempted Espionage  

Iranian state-backed cyber spies continue to impersonate media brands, think tanks 

US moves to bar Huawei, other Chinese telecoms from certifying wireless equipment

Cybersecurity   

Japanese police create fake support scam payment cards to warn victims

Why ICICI Bank has blocked thousands of credit cards

Discord dismantles Spy.pet site that snooped on millions of users

Assessing the Cyber Threat to the Nation’s Water Supply  

Safety and Security Guidelines for Critical Infrastructure Owners and Operators

How we fought bad apps and bad actors in 2023

FCC fines carriers $196 million for selling customer location data

Smart devices: new law helps citizens to choose secure products      

Semaforum with Joseph Cox: ‘I was just blown away by its audacity’  

Mind-Bending Math Could Stop Quantum Hackers—but Few Understand It  

2024 Data Breach Investigations Report  

The PLA Navy’s Blue Team Center Games for War

NSA, cybersecurity partners issue urgent OT threat warning        

Why hundreds of U.S. banks may be at risk of failure  

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, newsletter)

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