Cybercrime

New Zero-Day, Malware Indicate Second Group May Have Targeted SolarWinds

A piece of malware named by researchers Supernova and a zero-day vulnerability exploited to deliver this malware indicate that SolarWinds may have been targeted by a second, unrelated threat actor.

<p><strong><span><span>A piece of malware named by researchers Supernova and a zero-day vulnerability exploited to deliver this malware indicate that SolarWinds may have been targeted by a second, unrelated threat actor.</span></span></strong></p>

A piece of malware named by researchers Supernova and a zero-day vulnerability exploited to deliver this malware indicate that SolarWinds may have been targeted by a second, unrelated threat actor.

When FireEye disclosed details of the attack on SolarWinds in early December, in addition to the Sunburst backdoor, it mentioned a piece of malware named Supernova. However, further analysis has led researchers to believe that Supernova is not related to Sunburst.

Supernova has been described by Palo Alto Networks as a sophisticated, in-memory .NET web shell that can allow attackers to conduct reconnaissance and lateral movement, among other activities.

Supernova was initially believed to be linked to the SolarWinds supply chain attack, which involved trojanized updates for the company’s Orion monitoring platform and the delivery of the Sunburst backdoor. However, now, Microsoft, Palo Alto Networks, FireEye and others believe it may be unrelated to the supply chain attack and the work of a different threat actor.

“In an interesting turn of events, the investigation of the whole SolarWinds compromise led to the discovery of an additional malware that also affects the SolarWinds Orion product but has been determined to be likely unrelated to this compromise and used by a different threat actor,” Microsoft said in a recent blog post mentioning Supernova.

Continuous Updates: Everything You Need to Know About the SolarWinds Attack

It has also come to light that Supernova, which is designed for use on SolarWinds’ Orion platform, exploited a previously unknown vulnerability for deployment. This zero-day flaw, tracked as CVE-2020-10148 and described by CERT/CC as an authentication bypass issue that can allow a remote attacker to execute API commands, has now been patched by SolarWInds.

“SUPERNOVA is not malicious code embedded within the builds of our Orion Platform as a supply chain attack. It is malware that is separately placed on a server that requires unauthorized access to a customer’s network and is designed to appear to be part of a SolarWinds product,” SolarWinds said in an updated advisory.

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It’s believed that a Russian state-sponsored threat group is behind the SolarWinds supply chain attack — although, U.S. President Donald Trump has suggested that it may have been a Chinese group. No information has been released regarding who may be behind the Supernova malware and exploitation of CVE-2020-10148.

Texas-based SolarWinds said the supply chain attack may have impacted up to 18,000 customers of its Orion product, but an analysis of the domain generation algorithm (DGA) used by the Sunburst malware indicated that the attackers may have actually been interested in only a few hundred victims.

In addition to several U.S. government agencies that have reportedly been hit, some major private sector companies, including Microsoft, Cisco and VMware, have admitted finding malware on their systems, but said impact was limited.

One of the most recent companies to confirm being targeted was CrowdStrike, which said the attackers attempted to hack its emails via Microsoft services, but the attempt apparently failed. However, CrowdStrike has released a free tool, named CrowdStrike Reporting Tool for Azure (CRT), which is designed to help organizations review permissions in their Azure AD environments when looking for configuration weaknesses. CrowdStrike released the tool after realizing during its investigation into the impact of the SolarWinds attack on its own systems that such reviews are not easy to conduct.

CISA also announced recently that it has released an open source tool designed to help security teams identify possibly compromised accounts and applications in their Azure and Microsoft 365 environments.

Related: Group Behind SolarWinds Hack Bypassed MFA to Access Emails at US Think Tank

Related: SolarWinds Likely Hacked at Least One Year Before Breach Discovery

Related: SolarWinds Claims Execs Unaware of Breach When They Sold Stock

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