Cybaze ZLab – Yoroi team analyzed malware used in recent attacks on US entities attributed to APT29
Malware researchers from Cybaze ZLab – Yoroi team have detected a new strain of malware that appears to be associated with a new wave of attacks carries out by Russia linked APT29 group.
The researchers of Yoroi ZLab, on 16 November, accessed to a new APT29’s dangerous malware which seems to be involved in the recent wave of attacks aimed at many important US entities, such as military agencies, law enforcement, defense contractors, media companies and pharmaceutical companies.
“The Department is aware of the recent malicious cyber event involving the spoofing (impersonation) of a Department employee reported by U.S. cybersecurity firm FireEye. No Department networks were compromised by this malicious cyber attempt.” reads the statement released by the State Department.
Many experts and media outlets attributed the attack to the Russian APT group.
Threat actors carried out spear phishing attacks impersonating a State Department official to attempt compromising targets, the attacks are similar to the ones associated with Russia-linked group APT29 (aka The Dukes, Cozy Bear, and Cozy Duke).
APT29 along with APT28 cyber espionage group was involved in the Democratic National Committee hack and the wave of attacks aimed at the 2016 US Presidential Elections.
Moreover, many independent security researchers posted on Twitter about this news and currently, they are busy with the analysis of this threat.
Looking at (alleged) #APT29 LNK 2cea2a1f53dac3f4fff156eacc2ecc8e98b1a64f0f5b5ee1c42c69d9a226c55c – simple, yet effective, evasion for people just grabbing shit from VT and such and trying to run the damn thing. pic.twitter.com/rpuHZnQ3F6
— Joe Slowik (@jfslowik) November 16, 2018
Great work @jfslowik https://t.co/9ZXf8yfFYa
— Drunk Binary (@DrunkBinary) November 16, 2018
The threat actors have spread the malware through spear-phishing messages containing a zip file as an attachment. This file simply contains a link (.lnk) file with incredible capabilities.
When the victim double-clicks on the link file, it starts different malicious activities:
- It runs a Powershell command with which extracts another Powershell script from a hidden section of the .lnk file. This payload is contained from the location 0x0005E2BE to the location 0x0000623B6 of the file.
- The second script provides to create two new files: a legitimate pdf document (ds7002.pdf) and a dll file (cyzfc.dat) that probably contains the real payload.
- The DLL is written into “%APPDATA%Local” and it is launched through the second Powershell command. It tries to contact the address “pandorasong.com” and interacts with this site using the HTTPS protocol. The C2C is currently down, so the malware is unable to continue with its malicious activities. However, the Yoroi Zlab’s researchers have intercepted a request to the C2C, as shown in the following figure:
At the time of the analysis, it is not yet clear the real purpose of the malware because the C2C is down. Moreover, it doesn’t seem to implement any techniques to get persistence on the infected system.
Experts will publish a detailed technical analysis of the malicious DLL in the forthcoming weeks.
Stay tuned!
Below IoCs for themalware
IP:
- 95.216.59[.]92
URL:
- pandorasong[.]com
HASH:
- 2cea2a1f53dac3f4fff156eacc2ecc8e98b1a64f0f5b5ee1c42c69d9a226c55c
- b77ff307ea74a3ab41c92036aea4a049b3c2e69b12a857d26910e535544dfb05
- b1c811d3f0e930b0096a9e785f730ba4d92458bd6dcfbdff4cf7a1e247ef20d1
FILENAME:
- ds7002.lnk
- %APPDATA%Localcyzfc.dat
- %APPDATA%LocalTempds7002.pdf
|
(Security Affairs – APT29, malware)
The post Cybaze ZLab – Yoroi team analyzed malware used in recent attacks on US entities attributed to APT29 appeared first on Security Affairs.