Blog entry by Les Bell

Les Bell
by Les Bell - Monday, November 6, 2023, 9:55 AM
Anyone in the world

A wooden trojan horse on a wheeled platform.

(Photo by Tayla Kohler on Unsplash)

"Trojan Horse" is one of many cybersecurity terms that is overloaded with multiple meanings ("sandbox" is another). In the early security literature, a trojan horse was a pair of programs which could bypass the rules of a multi-level security system, sneaking information from a high security level (like TOPSECRET) to a low security level (like UNCLASSIFIED) which would allow it to be removed from the system and its secure environment.

Later, the term was reused for other purposes - one of them being a program that looks like it does one thing, but really does another. The stereotypical example is a program that emulates the login process on a UNIX system, but actually captures the user's credentials. Wait till the victim goes to lunch, having failed to log out, then run the program on their terminal session, and when they return from lunch, they'll assume they logged out, will log in again and voila! You've captured their password.

These days, the range of trojans is much greater. Many masquerade as mobile device apps, occasionally making it past static checks and into official app stores. Others pose as unlocked or free versions of popular programs - even open source programs that are free to download from their official sites only (Googling for software downloads is dangerous as threat actors will pay advertising fees to get their trojans inserted at the top of the results).

The additional functions of these trojans vary as well: some are infostealers, some are droppers, some are backdoors. Malware analysts routinely examine trojan code to figure out what they do, using static analysis, disassembly or running them in a sandbox to safely observe their behaviour.

And so it was with a malware sample which was first detected back in 2017, which analysts had classified as a Monero cryptocurrency miner. This kind of thing does not pose a major threat - mainly, it's stealing CPU cycles and eventually the user will notice, figure out what's going on, kill it and remove it. No big deal, and nobody took much notice.

The years passed, until Kaspersky researchers unexpectedly detected a signature within the WININT.EXE process of a malware sample associated with the Equation group. As they looked deeper, they traced back through previous examples, right back to this original suspicious code of 2017. Deciding to perform a detailed analysis revealed something completely unexpected: the cryptocurrency miner was just one component of something much larger.

They discovered that the malware used the EternalBlue SMBv1 exploit, which was first disclosed in April 2017 when the ShadowBrokers group tried to auction what they claimed was a library of exploits stolen from the NSA. But it was much more sophisticated than other malware that used the same exploit - much stealhier, and much more complex.

In fact, this malware family, which the Kaspersky researchers dubbed StripedFly, can propagate within a network using not only EternalBlue, but also the SSH protocol. Infection starts with injection of shellcode which can download binary files from bitbucket[.]org and execute PowerShell scripts. It then injects additional shellcode, deplying a payload consisting of an expandable framework with plugin functionality, including an extremely lightweight Tor network client.

The malware achieves persistence in various ways; if it can run PowerShell scripts with admin privileges, it will create task scheduler entries, but if running with user privileges, it inserts an obfuscated registry entry. Either way, it stores the body of the malware in another base64-encoded registry key. If it cannot run PowerShell scripts - for example, if it infected the system via the Cygwin SSH server - then it creates a hidden file with a randomized name in the %APPDATA% directory.

The download repository on Bitbucket was created in 2018, and contains updated versions of the malware. The main C2 server, however, is on the Tor network; the malware connects to it at regular intervals, sending beacon messages. The various modules which extend the malware register callbacks, which are triggered on initial connection to the C2 server, or when a C2 message is received - an architectural hallmark of APT malware.

The modules can be used to upgrade or uninstall the malware, capture user credentials (including wifi network names and passwords, SSH, FTP and WebDav credentials), take screenshots, execute commands, record microphone input, gather specific files, enumerate system information and - of course - mine Monero cryptocurrency.

In short, this is a very sophisticated piece of malware, and not the simple cryptominer it was originally believed to be. Somehow it has flown under the radar for many years, remaining largely undetected. Just who is behind it, and what their objectives may be, is far from clear.

The Kaspersky report provides a detailed analysis and IOC's, along with an amusing side-note concerning a related piece of malware called ThunderCrypt.

Belov, Sergey, Vilen Kamalov and Sergey Lozhkin, StripedFly: Perennially flying under the radar, blog post, 26 October 2023. Available online at https://securelist.com/stripedfly-perennially-flying-under-the-radar/110903/.


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Regular readers will notice the changed format of this blog; rather than aggregating several stories in one post, we have switched to posting individual stories with a more informative title. As before, links within a story mostly lead to further details in the course notes of some of our courses, and will only be accessible if you are enrolled in the corresponding course - this is a shallow ploy to encourage ongoing study. However, each item ends with a link to the original source.


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[ Modified: Monday, November 6, 2023, 3:47 PM ]