Rewterz Threat Alert – Mirai Botnet – Active IOCs
March 24, 2022Rewterz Threat Alert – APT29 Cozy Bear – Active IOCs
March 24, 2022Rewterz Threat Alert – Mirai Botnet – Active IOCs
March 24, 2022Rewterz Threat Alert – APT29 Cozy Bear – Active IOCs
March 24, 2022Severity
High
Analysis Summary
Cobalt Strike first appeared in 2012 in response to alleged flaws in the Metasploit Framework, an existing red team (penetration testing) tool. Cobalt Strike 3.0 was released in 2015 as a stand-alone opponent emulation platform. However, researchers began observing threat actors using Cobalt Strike by 2016. Cobalt Strike’s use in hostile activities was previously connected with huge cybercriminal operations like TA3546 and APT40. Two-thirds of detected Cobalt hit efforts from 2016 to 2018 were attributable to well-resourced cybercrime organizations or APT groups, according to researchers.
Cobalt Strike lets the attacker install a ‘Beacon’ agent on the target PC which provides the attacker with a plethora of capabilities, including command execution, file transfer, keylogging, mimikatz, port scanning, and privilege escalation. Cobalt Strike includes a toolkit called Artifact Kit that is used to create shellcode loaders.
Impact
- Data Exfiltration
- Information Theft
Indicators of Compromise
MD5
- 8716cec33a4fea1c00d57c4040945d9e
SHA-256
- e8da0c4416f4353aad4620b5a83ff84d6d8b9b8a748fdbe96d8a4d02a4a1a03c
SHA-1
- 301c94571cc0795c54f6ea7e20a453436133ad03
Remediation
- Block the threat indicators at their respective controls.
- Search for IOCs in your environment.