Thursday, February 9, 2023
LetsAskBinu.com
  • Home
  • Cybersecurity
  • Cyber Threats
  • Hacking
  • Protection
  • Networking
  • Malware
  • Fintech
  • Internet Of Things
No Result
View All Result
LetsAskBinu.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Cybersecurity

Budworm Threat Group Attacks Reveal ‘Change in Focus’

Researcher by Researcher
October 14, 2022
in Cybersecurity
0
Threat Actor Exploits Log4j Flaw in VMware Horizon
189
SHARES
1.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


A known espionage group was recently observed leveraging the Log4j vulnerability to target a number of high-value organizations worldwide, including an unnamed U.S.-based state legislature.

While over the past years, researchers have noted the Budworm group moving into more financially motivated cybercrimes that have involved the use of ransomware and targeted major gaming companies, in attacks over the past six months, Budworm was seen pivoting to attack a number of “strategically significant targets,” including the government of a Middle Eastern country, a global electronics manufacturer, a hospital in South East Asia and a U.S.-based entity. The latter is significant because it is the second time in recent months Budworm was linked to attacks against a U.S.-based target, said Symantec researchers.

“While there were frequent reports of Budworm targeting U.S. organizations six to eight years ago, in more recent years the group’s activity appears to have been largely focused on Asia, the Middle East, and Europe,” said researchers with Symantec in a Thursday analysis. “A resumption of attacks against U.S.-based targets could signal a change in focus for the group.”

These recent attacks relied on the known Log4j flaws (CVE-2021-44228 and CVE-2021-45105) – which according to a recent report by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) have been one of the top exploited flaws by Chinese threat actors since 2020 – in order to compromise the Apache Tomcat service and ultimately install webshells on compromised target networks.

As has been seen in previous attacks, Budworm’s main payload is the HyperBro malware family, which is a remote access trojan (RAT) that can log keystrokes, execute commands, and create a backdoor program with the abilities to upload and download files (the Plugx/Korplug trojan was also sometimes used as an alternate payload).

“The most likely reason we’re seeing attacks against the U.S. is a shift in strategic priorities.”

HyperBro was recently highlighted by CISA in a report after the agency found samples of the malware on an unnamed Defense Industrial Base sector organization.

Researchers said that HyperBro in some cases has been loaded with its own loader (under the file names peloader.exe, 12.exe) that is designed to load malicious DLLs and encrypt payloads. However, in other cases the malware is loaded using DLL side-loading, where attackers put a malicious DLL in a directory in lieu of a legitimate DLL, and then runs the application in order to load and execute the payload.

“In recent attacks, Budworm has used the endpoint privilege management software CyberArk Viewfinity to perform side-loading,” said researchers. “The binary, which has the default name vf_host.exe, is usually renamed by the attackers in order to masquerade as a more innocuous file. Masqueraded names included securityhealthservice.exe, secu.exe, vfhost.exe, vxhost.exe, vx.exe, and v.exe.”

Budworm also used a variety of known tools across its recent attacks, including Cobalt Strike, as well as tools that are newer for the threat group, including publicly available credential dumping tool LaZagne, proxy and port-forwarding tool IOX, the Fast Reverse Proxy tool and intranet scanning tool Fscan.

The China-linked Budworm group, which has activity overlaps with threat clusters tracked by others as APT27 or Emissary Panda, has been observed since at least 2013 targeting government, technology, and manufacturing organizations to collect political or military information.

Dick O’Brien, principal intelligence analyst for the Symantec threat hunter team, said the end goal of these more attacks appears to be information theft and that Budworm is usually “quite selective in who they target.”

“We don’t believe these attacks are opportunistic,” said O’Brien. “The infection vectors we are aware of are common globally and we’ve seen them attack organizations in other regions. The most likely reason we’re seeing attacks against the U.S. is a shift in strategic priorities.”



Source link

Related articles

New cybersecurity data reveals persistent social engineering vulnerabilities

New cybersecurity data reveals persistent social engineering vulnerabilities

February 9, 2023
New ToddyCat APT Targets Exchange Servers

Fortra Patches Actively Exploited Zero Day in GoAnywhere MFT

February 8, 2023
Tags: AttacksBudwormchangeFocusGrouprevealThreat
Share76Tweet47

Related Posts

New cybersecurity data reveals persistent social engineering vulnerabilities

New cybersecurity data reveals persistent social engineering vulnerabilities

February 9, 2023
0

Ransomware was down last year, though LockBit led threat actors and employees opened a third of the toxic emails in...

New ToddyCat APT Targets Exchange Servers

Fortra Patches Actively Exploited Zero Day in GoAnywhere MFT

February 8, 2023
0

Several days after news of exploit attempts against a zero day vulnerability in the GoAnywhere MFT secure file transfer tool...

The New Frontier of Data Security: Exploring the Potential of Quantum Random Number Generators (QRNGs) | by Binu Panicker | Feb, 2023

The New Frontier of Data Security: Exploring the Potential of Quantum Random Number Generators (QRNGs) | by Binu Panicker | Feb, 2023

February 8, 2023
0

World’s fastest real-time quantum random number generator with a photonic integrated chip. Credit: Bing Bai and Yao ZhengThe world of...

Sentra Raises $30 Million for DSPM Technology

Germany Appoints Central Bank IT Chief to Head Cybersecurity

February 8, 2023
0

The German government announced the appointment Tuesday of the European Central Bank’s head of IT systems to lead the national...

Metaverse Adds New Dimensions to Web 3.0 Cybersecurity

Metaverse Adds New Dimensions to Web 3.0 Cybersecurity

February 8, 2023
0

With more companies investing in Web 3.0 this year, including blockchain, gaming and the metaverse, the cat and mouse game...

Load More
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
This Week in Fintech: TFT Bi-Weekly News Roundup 08/02

This Week in Fintech: TFT Bi-Weekly News Roundup 15/03

March 15, 2022
QNAP Escalation Vulnerability Let Attackers Gain Administrator Privileges

QNAP Escalation Vulnerability Let Attackers Gain Administrator Privileges

March 15, 2022
Supply chain efficiency starts with securing port operations

Supply chain efficiency starts with securing port operations

March 15, 2022
A first look at threat intelligence and threat hunting tools

A first look at threat intelligence and threat hunting tools

March 15, 2022
Beware! Facebook accounts being hijacked via Messenger prize phishing chats

Beware! Facebook accounts being hijacked via Messenger prize phishing chats

0
Shoulder surfing: Watch out for eagle‑eyed snoopers peeking at your phone

Shoulder surfing: Watch out for eagle‑eyed snoopers peeking at your phone

0
Remote work causing security issues for system and IT administrators

Remote work causing security issues for system and IT administrators

0
Elementor WordPress plugin has a gaping security hole – update now – Naked Security

Elementor WordPress plugin has a gaping security hole – update now – Naked Security

0
Google’s AI Chatbot Is Out To Rival ChatGPT

Google’s AI Chatbot Is Out To Rival ChatGPT

February 9, 2023
New cybersecurity data reveals persistent social engineering vulnerabilities

New cybersecurity data reveals persistent social engineering vulnerabilities

February 9, 2023
New ToddyCat APT Targets Exchange Servers

Fortra Patches Actively Exploited Zero Day in GoAnywhere MFT

February 8, 2023
“Fintech Right Now is a Boys Club” – How to Close the Gender Gap in Fintech with Stax

Spotlight: How the Isle of Man Became an Insurtech Hub

February 8, 2023

Recent Posts

Google’s AI Chatbot Is Out To Rival ChatGPT

Google’s AI Chatbot Is Out To Rival ChatGPT

February 9, 2023
New cybersecurity data reveals persistent social engineering vulnerabilities

New cybersecurity data reveals persistent social engineering vulnerabilities

February 9, 2023
New ToddyCat APT Targets Exchange Servers

Fortra Patches Actively Exploited Zero Day in GoAnywhere MFT

February 8, 2023

Categories

  • Cyber Threats
  • Cybersecurity
  • Fintech
  • Hacking
  • Internet Of Things
  • Malware
  • Networking
  • Protection

Tags

Access attack Attacks banking BiWeekly bug Cisco cloud code critical Cybersecurity Data Digital exploited financial Fintech Flaw flaws Google Group Hackers Krebs Latest launches malware Microsoft million Network News open patches Payments platform Ransomware RoundUp security Software Stories TFT Threat Top vulnerabilities vulnerability warns Week

© 2022 Lets Ask Binu All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Cybersecurity
  • Cyber Threats
  • Hacking
  • Protection
  • Networking
  • Malware
  • Fintech
  • Internet Of Things

© 2022 Lets Ask Binu All Rights Reserved