Nation-State

Watering Hole Attack Exploits North Korea’s Flash Flaw

An attack leveraging the compromised website of a Hong Kong telecommunications company is using a recently patched Flash vulnerability that has been exploited by North Korea since mid-November 2017, Morphisec warns.

<p><span><span style="font-family: &quot;trebuchet ms&quot;, geneva;"><strong><span>An attack leveraging the compromised website of a Hong Kong telecommunications company is using a recently patched Flash vulnerability that has been exploited by North Korea since mid-November 2017, Morphisec warns.</span></strong></span></span></p>

An attack leveraging the compromised website of a Hong Kong telecommunications company is using a recently patched Flash vulnerability that has been exploited by North Korea since mid-November 2017, Morphisec warns.

The targeted vulnerability, CVE-2018-4878, first became public in early February, after South Korea’s Internet & Security Agency (KISA) issued an alert on it being abused by a North Korean hacker group. Adobe patched the flaw within a week.

By the end of February, cybercriminals were already abusing the vulnerability. The newly observed incident, Morphisec notes, is a textbook case of a watering hole assault. As part of such attacks, which are mainly focused on cyber-espionage, actors plant malware on websites their victims are likely to visit.

The newly observed incident revealed advanced evasive characteristics, as it was purely fileless, without persistence or any trace on the disk. Furthermore, it used a custom protocol on a non-filtered port.

“Generally, this advanced type of watering hole attack is highly targeted in nature and suggests that a very advanced group is behind it,” the security researchers note.

The Flash exploit used in this assault was highly similar to the one detailed in the previous analysis of the CVE-2018-4878 vulnerability, albeit it employs a different shellcode executed post exploitation.

The shellcode executes rundll32.exe and overwrites its memory with malicious code. This malicious code was designed to download additional code directly into the memory of the rundll32 process.

The security researchers also discovered that the command and control (C&C) server uses a custom protocol over the 443 port to communicate with the victim.  

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The additional code downloaded into the memory of rundll32 includes Metasploit Meterpreter and Mimikatz modules. Most of the modules were compiled on February 15, less than a week before the attack.

“As our analysis shows, this watering hole attack is of advanced evasive nature. Being purely fileless, without persistence or any trace on the disk, and the use of custom protocol on a non-filtered port, makes it a perfect stepping stone for a highly targeted attack chain. This clearly suggests that very advanced threat actors are responsible for it,” Morphisec says.

Despite these advanced evasive features, the attack used basic Metasploit framework components that were compiled just before the attack and lacked any sophistication, obfuscation or evasion, which creates confusion and makes it difficult to pinpoint the attack to an actor.

According to Morphisec, this attack, the exploit kits that were updated to target CVE-2018-4878, the campaign observed a few weeks ago, the vulnerability’s abuse by nation-based groups, all creates a certain sense of déjà vu.

“It is like the anarchy of 2-3 years ago when we had new exploits targeting a particular vulnerability discovered every week. Each one different enough to evade detection for those crucial first moments and security solutions always racing to catch up,” the security firm concludes.

Related: North Korea’s Flash Player Flaw Now Exploited by Cybercriminals

Relat
ed
:
Adobe Patches Flash Zero-Day Exploited by North Korean Hackers

Related Content

Copyright © 2024 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version