Image: Milo Bauman
A newly discovered custom malware dubbed SockDetour has been found on systems belonging to US defense contractors and used as a backup backdoor to maintain access to compromised networks.
The malicious payload was spotted by Unit 42 security researchers, who believe that its operators kept the backdoor under the radar for a long time as it has been used in the wild since at least July 2019.
SockDetour’s stealthiness can be explained by the fact that it “operates filelessly and socketlessly” on infected Windows servers by hijacking network connections, making it a lot harder to detect at the host and network levels.
The connection hijacking is done using the legitimate Microsoft Detours library package used for Windows API call monitoring and instrumentation.
“With such implementation, SockDetour [..] serves as a backup backdoor in case the primary backdoor is detected and removed by defenders,” Unit 42 explained.
In one of the attacks, the threat actors also used a very specific delivery server, a QNAP network-attached storage (NAS) device typically used by small businesses and previously infected with QLocker ransomware — they likely exploited the same security flaw (the CVE-2021-28799 remote code execution bug) to gain access to the server.
The researchers first spotted the malware being deployed onto the Windows server of at least one US defense contractor on July 27, 2021, which led to the discovery of three other defense orgs being targeted by the same group with the same backdoor.
“Based on Unit 42’s telemetry data and the analysis of the collected samples, we believe the threat actor behind SockDetour has been focused on targeting U.S.-based defense contractors using the tools,” the researchers revealed.
“Unit 42 has evidence of at least four defense contractors being targeted by this campaign, with a compromise of at least one contractor.”
The Chinese connection
The SockDetour backdoor is used in attacks by an APT activity cluster tracked by Unit 42 as TiltedTemple and previously linked to attacks exploiting several vulnerabilities in Zoho products, including ManageEngine ADSelfService Plus (CVE-2021-40539) and ServiceDesk Plus (CVE-2021-44077).
While the company did not attribute the SockDetour malware to a specific hacking group, Unit 42 researchers suspected in November that the TiltedTemple campaign is the work of a Chinese-sponsored threat group tracked as APT27.
The partial attribution is based on tactics and malicious tools matching APT27’s previous activity and similar targeting of the same range of industry sectors (e.g., defense, technology, energy, aerospace, government, and manufacturing) for cyber espionage.
TiltedTemple attacks focused on Zoho vulnerabilities led to the breach of networks belonging to critical infrastructure orgs organizations worldwide in three different campaigns throughout 2021, using:
Source: www.bleepingcomputer.com