Kaspersky Analysis Shines Light on DarkUniverse APT Group

  /     /     /  
Publicated : 23/11/2024   Category : security


Kaspersky Analysis Shines Light on DarkUniverse APT Group


Threat actor was active between 2009 and 2017, targeting military, government, and private organizations.



A threat campaign first spotted targeting Tibet and Uyghur activists in 2013 may have been much wider in scope than originally thought, a new analysis by Kaspersky has revealed.
The security vendor made the discovery when trying to identify an advanced persistent group the US National Security Agency (NSA) had been quietly tracking when the ShadowBrokers outfit leaked many of the spy agencys offensive tools in 2017.
One of the leaked tools had been used by the NSA to check for traces of malware and other artifacts tied to specific APT groups on compromised systems. Kaspersky Labs
analysis
of the tool revealed the NSA was using it to track 44 separate APT groups, many of them unknown and not publicly described at the time.
Researchers from the security firm decided to see what they could find about one of the APT groups the NSA was tracking, identified only as framework #27 in the tool.
In a report Tuesday, Kaspersky said its investigation showed the group — which it has dubbed DarkUniverse — targeted organizations in Middle Eastern and African countries, as well as entities in Russia and Belarus. 
Kaspersky was able to identify at least 20 victims, including medical institutions, atomic energy bodies, telecommunications firm, and military organizations. DarkUniverse appears to have operated between 2009 and 2017 and then ceased activities altogether following the ShadowBrokers leak, Kaspersky said.
After the publication of [the ShadowBrokers] leak, no traces of this specific activity surfaced, says Alexander Fedotov, malware analyst at Kaspersky Lab. It is possible that the group is still active but now uses other instruments.
DarkUniverse used spear-phishing emails to spread a malware tool that was designed to collect a wide range of information from infected systems, include keystrokes, emails, screenshots, and files from specific directories. The spear-phishing emails were customized for each target. Kaspersky said its analysis showed the malware had been built from scratch and then constantly modified and updated to the point where the samples the group used in 2017 were completely different from the 2009 samples.
Each malware sample was compiled immediately before being sent and included the latest available version of the malware executable, Kaspersky said in its
report
this week.
Sophisticated Threat Actor
Fedotov describes DarkUniverses malware as relatively sophisticated and involving the use of at least one zero-day exploit (CVE-2013-0640) involving a security issue in Adobe Reader. Some of the techniques the group employed, including its use of the WebDev protocol to send stolen data to legitimate cloud services, were, in fact, adopted by other groups, he says.
This report shows that there are actors with enough resources to develop a variety of similar-in-functionality and yet quite complex instruments at the same time and use them independently, Fedotov says.
According to Fedotov, what makes DarkUniverses activity significant is the groups apparent ties to the operators of
ItaDuke
, malware that first surfaced in multiple Uyghur- and Tibetan-themed attacks six years ago. Those attacks also involved the use of the same Adobe Reader 0-day exploit to drop ItaDuke on target systems. The attackers also used Twitter accounts to store command-and-control URLs.
Several unique code overlaps between the malware DarkUniverse developed and ItaDuke strongly suggest a link between the two.
ItaDuke represented a very complex malware, Fedotov says. With this new discovery of a malware connected to ItaDuke and similar in its level of sophistication, we observed that the real scale of ItaDuke operation is much wider than it was previously considered.
Fedotov wouldnt speculate on whether DarkUniverse was likely nation-state-backed or which country it operated from, citing challenges associated with attributing threat activity to a specific actor or location.
Related Content:
The Shadow Brokers: How They Changed Cyber Fear
Ex-NSA Contractor Was a Suspect In Shadow Brokers Leak
APT Groups Make Quadruple What They Spend on Attack Tools
Threat Actors Muddy Waters in Middle East with APT Hijacks, Fake Leaks in Q2 2019
Check out 
The Edge
, Dark Readings new section for features, threat data, and in-depth perspectives. Todays top story:
What a Security Products Blacklist Means for End Users and Integrators
.

Last News

▸ Debunking Machine Learning in Security. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security

▸ Researchers create BlackForest to gather, link threat data. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security

▸ Travel agency fined £150,000 for breaking Data Protection Act. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security


Cyber Security Categories
Google Dorks Database
Exploits Vulnerability
Exploit Shellcodes

CVE List
Tools/Apps
News/Aarticles

Phishing Database
Deepfake Detection
Trends/Statistics & Live Infos



Tags:
Kaspersky Analysis Shines Light on DarkUniverse APT Group