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Chinese Hackers Exploit Unpatched Fortinet Zero-Day Vulnerability

 

A Chinese state-sponsored actor abused an unpatched, unreported Fortinet vulnerability, despite the fact that the flaw was reported to the security firm in July. 

Volexity, a threat intelligence vendor, published research earlier this week referencing a new zero-day flaw -- one without a current CVE designation -- that allowed a Chinese state-sponsored actor known as "BrazenBamboo" to steal credentials in instances of Fortinet's Windows VPN client, FortiClient.

Perhaps most notably, Volexity stated that it disclosed the issue to Fortinet on July 18, with the latter acknowledging the report on July 24. "At the time of writing, this issue remains unresolved, and Volexity is not aware of an assigned CVE number," Volexity researchers Callum Roxan, Charlie Gardner, and Paul Rascagneres said in the blog post. 

Volexity's report lacks a description of the flaw itself. The researchers of the study identified a "zero-day credential disclosure flaw in Fortinet's Windows VPN client that allowed credentials to be stolen from the memory of the client's process." The blog also provides YARA rules, indicators of compromise, and an in-depth look at BrazenBamboo's "Deepdata" post-exploitation tool, which was employed in threat activity targeting the vulnerability. 

Roxan, Gardner, and Rascagneres said that their investigation began with the identification of an archive file associated with BrazenBamboo, which could be linked to a known Chinese advanced persistent threat (APT) group. The researchers uncovered files in the package related to Windows malware families known as "Deepdata" and "Deeppost," as well as a Windows form of LightSpy malware.

Deepdata, according to Volexity researchers, is a modular utility for Windows that "facilitates the collection of private data from a compromised system," and requires the perpetrator to have command-line access to the target device. It features both a loader and a virtual file system. Deeppost is a post-exploitation data exfiltration program that transfers files to a remote system. The researchers discovered the Fortinet zero day after uncovering a FortiClient plugin in Deepdata. 

"DEEPDATA supports a wide range of functionality to extract data from victims' systems. The observed functionality of several plugins is commonly seen and includes items typically stolen from victim systems," researchers explained. "However, Volexity noted the FortiClient plugin was uncommon and investigated it further. Volexity found the FortiClient plugin was included through a library with the filename msenvico.dll. This plugin was found to exploit a zero-day vulnerability in the Fortinet VPN client on Windows that allows it to extract the credentials for the user from memory of the client's process.”

The researchers further stated that "the FortiClient plugin looks for the username, password, remote gateway, and port from two different JSON objects in memory." Meanwhile, LightSpy is a command-and-control spyware that has previously been linked to campaigns targeting Hong Kong citizens. The malware is generally employed in attacks on Android, iOS, and macOS devices, so it's noteworthy that Volexity received files of a Windows edition.

Unofficial Patches Published for New Windows Themes Zero-Day Exploit

 

Free unofficial fixes are now available for a new zero-day flaw in Windows Themes that allows hackers to remotely harvest a target's NTLM credentials.

NTLM has been extensively exploited in NTLM relay attacks, in which threat actors force susceptible network devices to authenticate against servers under their control, and in pass-the-hash attacks, in which attackers exploit system vulnerabilities or deploy malicious software to steal NTLM hashes (hash passwords) from target systems. 

Once they acquire the hash, the attackers can impersonate the affected user, gaining access to sensitive data and expanding laterally throughout the now-compromised network. Microsoft indicated a year ago that it will drop the NTLM authentication technology in Windows 11. 

ACROS security experts uncovered the new Windows Themes zero-day (which has yet to be assigned a CVE ID) while working on a micropatch for a flaw tracked as CVE-2024-38030 that might reveal a user's credentials (reported by Akamai's Tomer Peled), which was itself a workaround for another Windows Themes spoofing vulnerability (CVE-2024-21320) fixed by Microsoft in January. 

According to Peled, "when a theme file specified a network file path for some of the theme properties (specifically BrandImage and Wallpaper), Windows would automatically send authenticated network requests to remote hosts, including user's NTLM credentials when such a theme file would be viewed in Windows Explorer.”

"This meant that merely seeing a malicious theme file listed in a folder or placed on the desktop would be enough for leaking user's credentials without any additional user action," ACROS Security CEO Mitja Kolsek stated. 

Even though Microsoft fixed CVE-2024-38030 in July, ACROS Security discovered another vulnerability that attackers may use to steal a target's NTLM credentials on all fully updated Windows versions, from Windows 7 to Windows 11 24H2. 

"So instead of just fixing CVE-2024-38030, we created a more general patch for Windows themes files that would cover all execution paths leading to Windows sending a network request to a remote host specified in a theme file upon merely viewing the file," Kolsek added. 

The firm is now offering free and unofficial security updates for this zero-day flaw via its 0patch micropatching service for all affected Windows versions until official patches from Microsoft are available, which have already been applied to all online Windows systems running the company's 0patch agent.

To install the micropatch on your Windows device, first create a 0patch account and then install the 0patch Agent. If no specific patching policy prevents it, the micropatch will be applied immediately without the need for a system restart once the agent is activated. 

However, it is crucial to remember that in this case, 0patch only delivers micropatches for Windows Workstation, as Windows Themes does not work on Windows Server until the Desktop Experience feature is deployed.

Lazarus Group Exploits Chrome Zero-Day Flaw Via Fake NFT Game

 

The notorious North Korean hacking outfit dubbed Lazarus has launched a sophisticated attack campaign targeting cryptocurrency investors. This campaign, discovered by Kaspersky researchers, consists of a multi-layered assault chain that includes social engineering, a fake game website, and a zero-day flaw in Google Chrome. 

The report claims that in May 2024, Kaspersky Total Security identified a new attack chain that used the Manuscrypt backdoor to target the personal computer of an unidentified Russian citizen. 

Kaspersky researchers Boris Larin and Vasily Berdnikov believe the campaign began in February 2024. After investigating the attack further, analysts discovered that the attackers had developed a website called "detankzonecom" that seemed to be a genuine platform for the game "DeFiTankZone." 

This game reportedly combines Decentralised Finance (DeFi) elements with Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) in a Multiplayer Online Battle Arena (MOBA) situation. The website even offers a downloadable trial edition, adding to the look of trustworthiness. However, beneath the surface is a malicious trap. 

“Under the hood, this website had a hidden script that ran in the user’s Google Chrome browser, launching a zero-day exploit and giving the attackers complete control over the victim’s PC,” researchers noted. 

The exploit contains code for two vulnerabilities: one that enables hackers to access the whole address space of the Chrome process using JavaScript (CVE-2024-4947), and the other that allows attackers to circumvent the V8 sandbox and access memory outside the confines of the register array. 

Google addressed CVE-2024-4947, a type confusion flaw in the V8 JavaScript and WebAssembly engine, in March 2024, although it's unknown if attackers discovered it first and weaponised it as a zero-day or exploited it as an N-day flaw.

In this campaign, Lazarus has used social media sites like LinkedIn and X (previously Twitter) to target prominent players in the cryptocurrency field. With several accounts on X, they created a social media presence and actively promoted the fake game. They also hired graphic designers and generative AI to create amazing advertising material for the DeTankZone game. The group also sent carefully designed messages to interested parties pretending to be blockchain startups or game developers looking for funding.

This campaign highlights how the Lazarus Group's strategies have changed. It is crucial to be wary of unsolicited investment opportunities, particularly when they involve dubious social media promotions or downloadable game clients. In order to mitigate the risk of zero-day attacks, it is also crucial to maintain browser software, such as Chrome, updated with the most recent security fixes.

Veeam Software Issues Fixes for Exploitable Security Flaws

 

Security experts recommend all Veeam Backup & Replication software customers to upgrade their software immediately to address a critical, remotely exploitable vulnerability. Veeam first revealed the flaw, dubbed CVE-2024-40711, on Thursday, when it issued fixes to address 18 vulnerabilities across its product range, including five major issues, which are so named because they may be remotely abused to execute arbitrary code. 

The upgrade for the widely used Veeam Backup & Replication software patches security flaws detected in version 12.1.2.172 and all previous version 12 versions. The software is employed for backup and recovery in cloud, virtual, and physical IT settings and is directly compatible with operating systems and environments such as AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, Oracle, SAP Hana, and Broadcom's VMware. 

Veeam Backup & Replication versions that are no longer supported, such as version 11, for which support ended in February, come with a warning from the company stating that they "are not tested, but are likely affected and should be considered vulnerable." 

Threat actors can exploit CVE-2024-40711 to remotely execute code on a Veeam Backup & Replication server without having to first authenticate to the server. The vendor rated the vulnerability 9.8 on the 10-point CVSS scale and credited its discovery to researcher Florian Hauser at cybersecurity service provider Code White. 

The company stated that the vulnerability could be leveraged to enable "full systems takeover" and that it would not immediately release any technical details regarding the flaw "because this might instantly be abused by ransomware gangs." 

Four additional vulnerabilities in Veeam Backup & Replication that were addressed in the Thursday update are classed as high-severity because exploiting them needs an attacker to first achieve a low-privileged role with the software or to have network access. 

Prior to the Veeam Backup & Replication March 2023 patch, Veeam addressed known vulnerabilities in the form of CVE-2023-27532, which has been the target of ransomware and cybercrime groups. Researchers warned that attackers might use that vulnerability to obtain encrypted credentials, which would give them illegal access to the program and possibly allow them to go to other areas of the network.

In July, cybersecurity company Group-IB revealed that, only a few weeks after its public release, groups like EstateRansomware appear to have begun concentrating on CVE-2023-27532. The United States Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency added CVE-2023-27532 to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalogue in August of last year.

'0.0.0.0 Day' Vulnerability Puts Chrome, Firefox, Mozilla Browsers at Risk

 

A critical security bug known as "0.0.0.0 Day" has shook the cybersecurity world, leaving millions of users of popular browsers such as Chrome, Firefox, and Safari vulnerable to future assaults. This vulnerability allows malicious actors to possibly gain access to files, messages, credentials, and other sensitive data saved on a device within a private network, specifically "localhost.” 

What is 0.0.0.0 day flaw?

The term "0.0.0.0 Day" refers to a new vulnerability identified by Israeli cybersecurity startup Oligo that hackers can exploit before a fix is released. The zeroes indicate a lack of prior information or awareness of flaws. This makes it especially risky because users and developers are taken completely off guard. 

According to the research, the exploit consists of fraudulent websites luring browsers into allowing them to interface with APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) running on a user's local PC. These APIs are primarily intended for internal communication within applications and should not be available from other sources, such as websites. Attackers that exploit the 0.0.0.0 Day vulnerability could possibly get unauthorised access to sensitive information saved on a user's device, steal data, or even launch malware. 

Impact on key browsers 

The security ramifications of this issue are extensive. Here's a closer look at the possible impact on major browsers. 

Chrome zero-Day vulnerability: Google Chrome, the world's most popular browser, is an obvious target for attackers. A successful exploit of the 0.0.0.0 Day bug could allow criminals to get beyond Chrome's security measures and get access to a user's local network. This could expose sensitive information kept on a user's PC, compromise corporate networks if a user works remotely, or even aid in the installation of malware. 

Firefox zero-day vulnerability: Although Firefox is not as extensively used as Chrome, it is a popular choice for many consumers. A successful exploit of the 0.0.0.0 Day vulnerability may have similar repercussions for Firefox users. Attackers could potentially obtain access to local networks, steal data, or carry out malware attacks. 

Safari Zero-Day vulnerability: The 0.0.0.0 Day vulnerability could also affect Apple's Safari browser, which is the default browser on all Apple devices. While Apple has a reputation for strong security, this vulnerability underlines the ongoing need for vigilance. A successful exploit can allow attackers access to a user's local network on a Mac or iOS device, possibly compromising private information or aiding new assaults. 

The disclosure of the 0.0.0.0 Day vulnerability underlines the ongoing challenge of ensuring browser security in an increasingly complicated threat ecosystem. Browser developers must continue to invest in R&D to remain ahead of thieves. Users must also be cautious and follow best practices to safeguard themselves from emerging risks.

Cisco Patches NX-OS Zero-Day Exploited by Chinese Attackers

 

Cisco patched a NX-OS zero-day, identified as CVE-2024-20399 (CVSS score of 6.0), which the China-linked group Velvet Ant used to deploy previously unidentified malware as root on vulnerable switches. 

The bug exists in the CLI of Cisco NX-OS Software; an authenticated, local attacker can exploit it to execute arbitrary commands as root on the underlying operating system of the affected device. 

“This vulnerability is due to insufficient validation of arguments that are passed to specific configuration CLI commands. An attacker could exploit this vulnerability by including crafted input as the argument of an affected configuration CLI command.” reads the advisory issued by Cisco. “A successful exploit could allow the attacker to execute arbitrary commands on the underlying operating system with the privileges of root.” 

The IT giant emphasised that only hackers with Administrator privileges can successfully exploit this vulnerability on a Cisco NX-OS system. In April 2024, researchers informed the Cisco Product Security Incident Response Team (PSIRT) that the vulnerability was actively exploited in the wild. Sygnia, a cybersecurity firm, discovered the attacks in April 2024 and reported them to Cisco. The bug impacts the following devices: 

  • MDS 9000 Series Multilayer Switches (CSCwj97007) 
  • Nexus 3000 Series Switches (CSCwj97009) 
  • Nexus 5500 Platform Switches (CSCwj97011) 
  • Nexus 5600 Platform Switches (CSCwj97011) 
  • Nexus 6000 Series Switches (CSCwj97011) 
  • Nexus 7000 Series Switches (CSCwj94682) * 
  • Nexus 9000 Series Switches in standalone NX-OS mode (CSCwj97009) 

Cisco recommends that customers keep track of the credentials used by administrative users network-admin and vdc-admin. Cisco offers the Cisco Software Checker to help customers assess whether their devices are susceptible to this issue. 

In late 2023, Sygnia researchers responded to a critical organization's problem, which they traced to the same China-linked threat actor 'Velvet Ant.' The cyberspies used customised malware on F5 BIG-IP appliances to get persistent access to the target organization's internal network and steal sensitive data.

IBM MOVEit Hack Exposes Data of 4 Million US Citizens

 

Millions of Americans had their private medical and health information stolen after attackers hacked into systems operated by tech giant IBM and exploited a zero-day flaw in the widely used MOVEit file transfer software. 

The MOVEit major hacks exposed the data of more than 4 million patients, according to the Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing (HCPF), which oversees Colorado's Medicaid programme.

In a notification of a data breach sent to people impacted, Colorado's HCPF stated that IBM, one of the state's vendors, "uses the MOVEit application to move HCPF data files in the normal course of business." 

While the Colorado state government or HCPF systems were unaffected by this problem, the letter claims that "certain HCPF files on the MOVEit application used by IBM were accessed by the unauthorised actor." 

These files contain the full names, birth dates, residences, Social Security numbers, Medicaid and Medicare ID numbers, information on income, clinical and medical data (such as lab results and medication information), and information on health insurance for the patients. 

HCPF claimed that the hack in the system affected nearly 4.1 million people. However, IBM is yet to publicly disclose that it was impacted by the MOVEit mass attacks.

The Department of Social Services (DSS) in Missouri was also affected by the IBM MOVEit system breach. However, the exact number of victims is unknown at the moment. Missouri state is home to more than 6 million people. 

Missouri's DSS stated in a data breach notification posted last week: "IBM is a vendor that provides services to DSS, the state agency that provides Medicaid services to eligible Missourians." The data vulnerability did not directly affect any DSS systems, but it did affect DSS data." 

According to DSS, the data accessed may include an individual's name, department client number, date of birth, potential benefit eligibility status or coverage, and medical claims information. 

Neither Colorado's HCPF nor Missouri's DSS are named on the dark web leak site of the Clop ransomware gang, which has claimed responsibility for the mass hacks. The Russia-linked group asserts on the site, "We don't have any government data."

Colorado's latest breach comes just days after the Colorado Department of Higher Education revealed a ransomware incident in which hackers accessed and copied 16 years of data from its networks. Last month, Colorado State University disclosed a MOVEit-related data breach that affected tens of thousands of students and academic employees.

Chinese Attackers Abused Sophos Firewall Zero-Day Bug to Target South Asian Organizations

 

Chinese hackers exploited a critical security vulnerability in Sophos' firewall product that came to light earlier this year to infiltrate multiple organizations in the South Asia region. 

The security bug has been patched in the meantime but multiple hackers continued to exploit it to bypass authentication and run arbitrary code remotely on several organizations. 

On March 25, Sophos issued a security patch about CVE-2022-1040, an authentication bypass flaw that affects the User Portal and Webadmin of Sophos Firewall and could be weaponized to implement arbitrary code remotely. 

Earlier this week, Volexity researchers detailed an assault from a Chinese APT group they track as DriftingCloud, which exploited CVE-2022-1040 since early March, a little over three weeks before Sophos issued a patch. The hackers employed a zero-day exploit to drop a webshell backdoor and target the customer’s staff. 

“This particular attack leveraged a zero-day exploit to compromise the customer’s firewall. Volexity observed the attacker implement an interesting webshell backdoor, create a secondary form of persistence, and ultimately launch attacks against the customer’s staff. These attacks aimed to further breach cloud-hosted web servers hosting the organization’s public-facing websites.” reads a blog post published by Volexity researchers. “This type of attack is rare and difficult to detect. This blog post serves to share what highly targeted organizations are up against and ways to defend against attacks of this nature.” 

The adversary used the zero-day exploit to compromise the firewall to install webshell backdoors and malware that would enable compromising external systems outside the network protected by Sophos Firewall. Volexity spotted the breach while investigating suspicious traffic generated from the Sophos Firewall to key systems in its customer’s networks. The examination of the logs revealed significant and repeated suspicious access aimed at a valid JSP file (login.jsp). 

Further investigation disclosed that the hackers were using the Behinder framework, which was employed by other Chinese APT groups in assaults abusing the recently disclosed CVE-2022-26134 vulnerability in Confluence servers. 

The exploitation of the Sophos Firewall was the first stage of the attack chain, APT group later launched man-in-the-middle (MitM) assaults to steal data and use them to exploit additional systems outside of the network where the firewall resided. Once secured access to the target webservers, the hackers installed multiple open-source malware, including PupyRAT, Pantegana, and Sliver.

Organizations are More Susceptible to Known Vulnerabilities in Comparison to Zero-Day Flaw

 

A study of APT hacking campaigns conducted from 2008 to 2020 by University of Trento security researchers indicates enterprise IT security admins should worry most about fixing their systems for known vulnerabilities, rather than chasing a patch for every zero-day flaw that emerges. 

The researchers analyzed the impact of 86 APTs and 350 attack campaigns and debunked the belief that all APTs are highly sophisticated and prefer targeting zero-day flaws rather than ones that have already been patched. 

“Contrary to common belief, most APT campaigns employed publicly known vulnerabilities,” researchers Giorgio Di Tizio, Michele Armellini, and Fabio Massacci wrote in the report published on the pre-print server arXiv. 

Indeed, out of the 86 APTs they examined, only eight – known respectively as Stealth Falcon, APT17, Equation, Dragonfly, Elderwood, FIN8, DarkHydrus, and Rancor – exploited CVEs were not used by anybody else. This demonstrates that not all the APTs are as sophisticated as many thinks, as the groups “often reuse tools, malware, and vulnerabilities,” researchers wrote. 

Faster updates minimize the threat 

The study showed that organizations that apply software updates as soon as they're published face the lowest odds of being compromised. However, the need to do regression testing before applying an update means that entities often take far longer to update their software. 

It typically takes more than 200 days for an organization to align 90 percent of their machines with the latest software patches due to regression testing, which ensures that updated systems function properly after the update, researchers found. Such behavior is rational because not all vulnerabilities are always exploited in the wild. However, to combat APTs, slow updates do not seem appropriate. 

The study conducted by University of Trento researchers specifically focused on the effectiveness and cost of different software update strategies for five widely used enterprise software products: Office, Acrobat Reader, Air, JRE, and Flash Player for the Windows OS environment. 

"In summary, for the broadly used products we analyzed, if you cannot keep updating always and immediately (e.g., because you must do regression testing before deploying an update), then being purely reactive on the publicly known vulnerable releases has the same risk profile than updating with a delay, but costs significantly less," the researchers added.

Cybercriminals are Exploiting Zero-day Vulnerabilities at a Record Pace

 

The HP Wolf Security threat research team has discovered evidence that threat actors are mobilizing quickly to weaponize new zero-day vulnerabilities. 

According to HP Wolf Security Threat Insights Report, the attackers are abusing specific problems like CVE-2021-40444 -- the remote code execution flaw that enables exploitation of the MSHTML browser engine through Microsoft Office documents. The vulnerability was first identified by HP on September 8, a week before Microsoft released the patch.

By September 10, the HP threat research team detected scripts designed to automate the creation of this exploit being published it on GitHub. The exploit gives attackers a startlingly easy entry point into systems, deploying malware through an Office document that only needs very little user interaction.

The security researchers compile the report by examining the millions of endpoints running HP Wolf Security. The report shows that 12% of isolated email malware evaded at least one gateway scanner while 89% of malware spotted was delivered via email. Also, the web downloads were responsible for 11%, and other vectors like removable storage devices for less than 1%. 

The average time for a company to apply, test, and fully deploy patches with the proper checks is 97 days, giving threat actors an opportunity to exploit this 'window of vulnerability', explained Alex Holland, the senior malware analyst with the HP Wolf Security threat research team. 

"While only highly capable hackers could exploit this vulnerability at first, automated scripts have lowered the bar for entry, making this type of attack accessible to less¬ knowledgeable and resourced threat actors. This increases the risk to businesses substantially, as zero-day exploits are commoditized and made available to the mass market in venues like underground forums," Holland said. 

"Such novel exploits tend to be effective at evading detection tools because signatures may be imperfect and become obsolete quickly as the understanding of the scope of an exploit change. We expect threat actors to adopt CVE-2021-40444 as part of their arsenals, and potentially even replace common exploits used to gain initial access to systems today, such as those exploiting Equation Editor."

Unfortunately, some major platforms like OneDrive are allowing attackers to conduct 'flash in the pan' attacks. Although malware hosted on such platforms is generally taken down quickly, this does not deter attackers because they can often secure their goal of deploying malware in the few hours the links are live, Holland explained.

"Some threat actors are changing the script or file type they are using every few months. Malicious JavaScript and HTA files are nothing new, but they are still landing in employee inboxes, putting the enterprise at risk. One campaign deployed Vengeance Justice Worm, which can spread to other systems and USB drives," Holland added. 

Additionally, the researchers discovered threat actors exploiting Cloud and web providers to install malware as well as multiple malware families being hosted on Discord and other gaming social media platforms. 

With cyber-assaults increasing with each passing day, Dr. Ian Pratt, Global Head of Security for Personal Systems, HP Inc. believes that companies can’t keep relying on detection alone. He believes the threat landscape is too dynamic and, as highlighted in the analysis of threats captured, attackers are increasingly evolving to bypass any detection tool.

"Organizations must take a layered approach to endpoint security, following zero trust principles to contain and isolate the most common attack vectors like email, browsers, and downloads. This will eliminate the attack surface for whole classes of threats while giving organizations the breathing room needed to coordinate patch cycles securely without disrupting services," Pratt said.