Rewterz Threat Alert – Amadey Botnet – Active IOCs
September 4, 2023Rewterz Threat Advisory – CVE-2023-35892 – IBM Financial Transaction Manager for SWIFT Services Vulnerability
September 5, 2023Rewterz Threat Alert – Amadey Botnet – Active IOCs
September 4, 2023Rewterz Threat Advisory – CVE-2023-35892 – IBM Financial Transaction Manager for SWIFT Services Vulnerability
September 5, 2023Severity
High
Analysis Summary
The Konni APT (Advanced Persistent Threat) group is a cyber espionage group that has been active since at least 2014. It is believed to be based in North Korea and is known for targeting government agencies and organizations in South Korea and the United States.
The North Korean hacker group distributes Konni RAT via phishing messages or emails. The infection chain begins when the victim accesses a weaponized file. Adversaries employ Konni RAT to gather information from victims, capture screenshots, steal files, and build a remote interactive shell. KONNI has been linked to various alleged North Korean attacks targeting political groups in Russia, East Asia, Europe, and the Middle East. KONNI shares a significant code overlap with the NOKKI malware family. Konni’s APT Group continues to attack malicious documents written in Russian. This threat actor group conducts attacks with Russian-North Korean trade and economic investment documents.
This APT group was detected targeting the Russian diplomatic sector in January 2022, employing a spear phishing theme for New Year’s Eve festivities as a bait. When the malicious email attachment is opened and processed, a series of events occur, allowing the actor to install an implant from the Konni RAT family as the final payload.
Impact
- Information Theft and Espionage
Indicators of Compromise
Domain Name
ttzcloud.com
MD5
- ddd07976e889bfc58e2925cd22e5198a
- 1354d7b8a02b17a2a4ae27ece272ed12
- 0fa91325446fd53a3bc2b1dee29cfce3
- bc3fb948dc956f79dbc7aac06442d6ef
- 2c2b800c2e20f5f3ae0332bf59f8df13
SHA-256
- d245f208d2a682f4d2c4464557973bf26dee756b251f162adb00b4074b4db3ac
- be59fcf56d3bc1c9a97e00574400600ad70cd7d9f131391a3e87b1e7f281ce9b
- 9b7710c623f11d932dd4a362cab2cc362a25875508204fcde2fffb6ae4af8a6e
- 440ca9963b73653615de02e44b2ccd137e9609bb9975e79ffed1dca713a163d6
- afc742412c9071d0a989aaa94dbf439882c1ebc19b095588989489006ecbe7df
SHA-1
- cabb494d8a2a36a3f653aa7900a14a921dccf05e
- 3e5ccae0125811920c756c2ab4ade9c8cd47d6db
- ed1e7ae7de2151df281807690919b39f9f3ba9ac
- e9f7e2eaf7f299d0ae4a4625eda8c5be45ebb96f
- fd131968bd86f6be18aba660cd7e7c941b5bb1cd
Remediation
- Block all threat indicators at your respective controls.
- Search for Indicators of compromise (IOCs) in your environment utilizing your respective security controls
- Do not download documents attached in emails from unknown sources and strictly refrain from enabling macros when the source isn’t reliable.
- Enable antivirus and anti-malware software and update signature definitions in a timely manner. Using multi-layered protection is necessary to secure vulnerable assets
- Patch and upgrade any platforms and software timely and make it into a standard security policy.
- Enforced Access Management Policies.
- Along with network and system hardening, code hardening should be implemented within the organization so that their websites and software are secure. Use testing tools to detect any vulnerabilities in the deployed codes.