FortiGuard Labs is aware of a new variant of the GIMMICK malware that is targeting Asian users. Discovered by researchers at Volexity, the GIMMICK implant has been attributed to the StormCloud APT group. According to the report, GIMMICK variants for macOS and Windows environments were seen. It also has been observed to be using File based command and control, specifically Google Cloud. GIMMICK has been attributed to nation state actors operating out of China. What is GIMMICK?GIMMICK is an implant that is similar to a remote access trojan (RAT) that allows the attacker to perform various instructions on the victim machine to further lateral movement. What makes this different from a RAT is that it is asynchronous in nature, moves in predefined pattern and does not really rely on an attacker to control. Once the implant is run, it follows a set of steps to further lateral movement and stores all information in a set of directories. Once these steps are completed, the exfiltrated data will be automatically uploaded to a predefined C2 server hosted on Google Drive. This allows for the implant to go undetected as traffic to Google Drive would be considered clean and not malicious traffic. What Operating Systems are Affected?MacOS and Windows platforms. Is GIMMICK Attributed to any other Groups?No. GIMMICK appears to be attributed to StormCloud only. What is the Status of Coverage?FortiGuard Labs has AV coverage in place as:Customers running the latest definitions are protected by the following (AV) signature:OSX/Gimmick.A!tr
Category Archives: Advisories
Joint CyberSecurity Advisory Alert on AvosLocker Ransomware
FortiGuard Labs is aware that a joint advisory on AvosLocker malware was recently issued by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the US Department of Treasury. AvosLocker is a Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) that has targeted organizations across multiple critical infrastructure sectors in the United States. The targeted sectors include financial services, critical manufacturing, and government facilities organizations. Other AvosLocker victims are in multiple countries throughout the world. Why is this Significant?This is significant because the joint advisory indicates that organizations across multiple critical infrastructure sectors in the United States were targeted by AvosLocker ransomware. The advisory calls out vulnerabilities that the ransomware group exploited, which companies need to consider patching as soon as possible.What is AvosLocker?AvosLocker ransomware targets Windows and Linux systems and was first observed in late June 2021. As Ransomware-as-a-Service, AvosLocker is advertised on a number of Dark Web communities, recruiting affiliates (partners) and access brokers. After breaking into a target and locating accessible files on the victim network, AvosLocker exfiltrates data, encrypts the files with AES-256, and leaves a ransom note “GET_YOUR_FILES_BACK.txt”. Some of the known file extensions that AvosLocker adds to the files it encrypted are “.avos”, “.avos2”, and “.avoslinux”.On top of leaving a ransom note to have the victim pay in order to recover their encrypted files and to not have their stolen information disclosed to the public, some AvosLocker victims were reported to have received phone calls from an AvosLocker attacker. The calls threatened the victim to go to the payment site for negotiation. Some victims also received an additional threat that the attacker would launch Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks against them. AvosLocker’s leak site is called “press release” where the victims are listed along with a description about them.How Widespread is AvosLocker Ransomware?The advisory indicates that AvosLocker’s known victims are “in the United States, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Germany, Spain, Belgium, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Canada, China, and Taiwan”.What Vulnerabilities are Exploited by AvosLocker?The advisory states that “multiple victims have reported on premise Microsoft Exchange Server vulnerabilities as the likely intrusion vector”. Those vulnerabilities include CVE-2021-26855 and ProxyShell, which is an exploit attack chain involving three Microsoft exchange vulnerabilities: CVE-2021-34473, CVE-2021-34523 and CVE-2021-31207. Also, a path traversal vulnerability in the FortiOS SSL-VPN web portal was reported to have been exploited by the AvosLocker group.FortiGuard Labs previously posted a Threat Signal on ProxyShell. See the Appendix for a link to “Vulnerable Microsoft Exchange Servers Actively Scanned for ProxyShell” and FortiGuard Labs released a patch for CVE-2018-13379 in May 2019. For additional information, see the Appendix for a link to “Malicious Actor Discloses FortiGate SSL-VPN Credentials”, and “The Art of War (and Patch Management)” for the importance of patch management.What Tools is AvosLocker Known to Utilize?The advisory references the following tools:Cobalt StrikeEncoded PowerShell scriptsPuTTY Secure Copy client tool “pscp.exe”RcloneAnyDeskScannerAdvanced IP ScannerWinLister What is the Status of Coverage?FortiGuard Labs provides the following AV coverage against known samples of AvosLocker ransomware:W32/Cryptor.OHU!tr.ransomW32/Filecoder.OHU!tr.ransomELF/Encoder.A811!tr.ransomLinux/Filecoder_AvosLocker.A!trPossibleThreatFortiGuard Labs provides the following AV coverage against ProxyShell:MSIL/proxyshell.A!trMSIL/proxyshell.B!trFortiGuard Labs provides the following IPS coverage against CVE-2021-26855, ProxyShell, and CVE-2018-13379:MS.Exchange.Server.ProxyRequestHandler.Remote.Code.Execution (CVE-2021-26855)MS.Exchange.Server.CVE-2021-34473.Remote.Code.Execution (CVE-2021-34473)MS.Exchange.Server.Common.Access.Token.Privilege.Elevation (CVE-2021-34523)MS.Exchange.MailboxExportRequest.Arbitrary.File.Write (CVE-2021-31207)FortiOS.SSL.VPN.Web.Portal.Pathname.Information.Disclosure (CVE-2018-13379)FortiGuard Labs provides the following IPS coverage against CobaltStrike:Backdoor.Cobalt.Strike.BeaconAll network IOCs are blocked by the WebFiltering client.
ZDI-22-530: (Pwn2Own) Netatalk ad_addcomment Stack-based Buffer Overflow Remote Code Execution Vulnerability
This vulnerability allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code on affected installations of Netatalk. Authentication is not required to exploit this vulnerability.
ZDI-22-529: (Pwn2Own) Netatalk setfilparams Stack-based Buffer Overflow Remote Code Execution Vulnerability
This vulnerability allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code on affected installations of Netatalk. Authentication is not required to exploit this vulnerability.
ZDI-22-528: (Pwn2Own) Netatalk getdirparams Out-Of-Bounds Read Information Disclosure Vulnerability
This vulnerability allows remote attackers to disclose sensitive information on affected installations of Netatalk. Authentication is not required to exploit this vulnerability.
ZDI-22-527: (Pwn2Own) Netatalk parse_entries Improper Handling of Exceptional Conditions Remote Code Execution Vulnerability
This vulnerability allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code on affected installations of Netatalk. Authentication is not required to exploit this vulnerability.
ZDI-22-526: (Pwn2Own) Netatalk copyapplfile Stack-based Buffer Overflow Remote Code Execution Vulnerability
This vulnerability allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code on affected installations of Netatalk. Authentication is not required to exploit this vulnerability.
ZDI-22-525: (Pwn2Own) Netatalk get_finderinfo Out-Of-Bounds Read Information Disclosure Vulnerability
This vulnerability allows remote attackers to disclose sensitive information on affected installations of Netatalk. Authentication is not required to exploit this vulnerability.
ZDI-22-524: (Pwn2Own) NETGEAR R6700v3 libreadycloud.so Command Injection Remote Code Execution Vulnerability
This vulnerability allows network-adjacent attackers to execute arbitrary code on affected installations of NETGEAR R6700v3 routers. Although authentication is required to exploit this vulnerability, the existing authentication mechanism can be bypassed.
ZDI-22-523: (Pwn2Own) NETGEAR R6700v3 circled Stack-based Buffer Overflow Remote Code Execution Vulnerability
This vulnerability allows network-adjacent attackers to execute arbitrary code on affected installations of NETGEAR R6700v3 routers. Although authentication is required to exploit this vulnerability, the existing authentication mechanism can be bypassed.