Nation-State

Windows Zero-Day Attack Linked to North Korea’s Lazarus APT

The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2024-38193 and marked as ‘actively exploited’ by Microsoft, allows SYSTEM privileges on the latest Windows operating systems.

North Korea flag

Security researchers at Gen Threat Labs are linking one of the exploited zero-days patched by Microsoft last week to North Korea’s Lazarus APT group.

The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2024-38193 and marked as ‘actively exploited’ by Microsoft, allows SYSTEM privileges on the latest Windows operating systems.

Gen, which is a rollup of consumer brands Norton, Avast, LifeLock and Avira, posted a sparse note linking the exploitation to Lazarus via the use of the FudModule rootkit.  However, the company did not release any indicators or technical documentation to support the connection.

“In early June, Luigino Camastra and Milanek discovered that the Lazarus group was exploiting a hidden security flaw in a crucial part of Windows called the AFD.sys driver. This flaw allowed them to gain unauthorized access to sensitive system areas. We also discovered that they used a special type of malware called Fudmodule to hide their activities from security software,” the company said without providing additional details. 

Avast previously documented FudModule as part of the Lazarus APT toolkit that included an admin-to-kernel Windows zero-day exploit dating back to February.

This is one of six zero-days marked as exploited by Microsoft in the August Patch Tuesday bundle. Security experts also believe a second flaw (CVE-2024-38178) is being used by North Korean APT groups to target victims in South Korea.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

That bug, a memory corruption vulnerability in the Windows Scripting Engine, allows remote code execution attacks if an authenticated client is tricked into clicking a link. Successful exploitation of this vulnerability requires an attacker to first prepare the target so that it uses Edge in Internet Explorer Mode. 

This Scripting Engine zero-day was reported by Ahn Lab and the South Korea’s National Cyber Security Center, suggesting it was used in a nation-state APT compromise.  Microsoft did not release IOCs (indicators of compromise) or any other data to help defenders hunt for signs of infections.  

Related: Zero-Click Exploit Concerns Drive Urgent Patching of Windows TCP/IP Flaw

Related: Microsoft Warns of Six Windows Zero-Days Being Actively Exploited

Related: Microsoft: China Flaw Disclosure Law Part of Zero-Day Exploit Surge

Related: Windows Update Flaws Allow Undetectable Downgrade Attacks

Related: Adobe Calls Attention to Massive Batch of Code Execution Flaws

Related Content

Cybercrime

Oracle has mitigated CVE-2026-35273, but it has not publicly confirmed the vulnerability’s in-the-wild exploitation.

Vulnerabilities

Oracle has released mitigations for CVE-2026-35273, but it has not said whether it’s a zero-day exploited in ShinyHunters attacks.

Endpoint Security

The PoC exploits Microsoft Defender’s offline scan to spawn a SYSTEM shell when rebooting in Recovery Mode.

Vulnerabilities

Organizations are advised to apply vendor-supplied mitigations or discontinue the vulnerable devices.

Ransomware

The authentication bypass vulnerability allows attackers to establish VPN connections without a valid password.

Vulnerabilities

The vulnerability is tracked as CVE-2026-11645 and it was reported in late April by an anonymous researcher.

Vulnerabilities

The vulnerability is tracked as CVE-2026-20245 and it can allow arbitrary command execution as root, but no patch yet.

Vulnerabilities

A researcher has disclosed the full details of the vulnerability and released a PoC without notifying Microsoft in advance.

Copyright © 2026 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version