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Kaspersky Research Finds Cloud Atlas APT Upgraded with Polymorphic Malware

August 12, 2019

Cloud Atlas, an advanced persistent threat (APT), also known as Inception, has updated its attack arsenal with new tools which allow it to avoid detection through standard Indicators of Compromise.

Woburn, MA – August 12, 2019 –Kaspersky research has found that Cloud Atlas, an advanced persistent threat (APT) also known as Inception, has enhanced its attack arsenal with new tools that allow it to avoid detection through standard Indicators of Compromise (IoC). This updated infection chain has been spotted in different organizations in Eastern Europe, Central Asia and Russia.

Cloud Atlas has a long history of cyber-espionage operations targeting industries, government agencies and other entities. The threat actor was first identified in 2014 and has been active ever since. Recently, Kaspersky researchers have seen Cloud Atlas targeting the international economics and aerospace industries as well as government and religious organizations in Portugal, Romania, Turkey, Ukraine, Russia, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan and Kyrgyzstan among other countries.

Upon successful infiltration, Cloud Atlas will:

  • Collect information about the system it has gained access to
  • Log passwords
  • Exfiltrate recent .txt .pdf. xls .doc files to a command and control server

While Cloud Atlas hasn’t dramatically changed its tactics, research from recent waves of attacks have discovered a new technique of infecting victims including lateral movement through networks.

Fig.1: The infection chain that was used by Cloud Atlas before April 2019.

Previously, Cloud Atlas would first send a spear-phishing email with a malicious attachment to a target. In the case of a successful exploitation, PowerShower, the attached malware used for initial investigation and to download additional malicious modules, would then be executed to allow cyberattackers to proceed with an operation.

The newly updated chain of infection postpones the execution of PowerShower until a later stage. Instead, after the initial infection, a malicious HTML app is now downloaded and executed on the target machine. This application will then collect initial information about the attacked computer and download and execute VBShower, another malicious module. VBShower then erases evidence of the presence of malware in the system and consults with its masters through command and control servers to decide on further actions. Depending on the command received, this malware will then download and execute either PowerShower or another well-known Cloud Atlas second stage backdoor.

Fig 2. The updated Cloud Atlas infection chain

While this new infection chain is more complicated than the previous model, its main differentiator is that a malicious HTML application and the VBShower module are polymorphic. This means that the code in both modules will be new and unique in each case of infection. According to Kaspersky experts, this updated version is carried out in order to make the malware invisible to security solutions relying on familiar IoCs.

“It has become good practice in the security community to share the IoC of malicious operations we find through research. This practice allows us to respond to ongoing international cyber-espionage operations quite swiftly, preventing any further damage they could cause,” said Felix Aime, security researcher in the Kaspersky Global Research and Analysis Team. “However, as we predictedas early as 2016, IoC have become obsolete as a reliable tool to spot a targeted attack in your network. This first emerged with ProjectSauron, which would create a unique set of IoC for each of its victims and continued with the trend of using open source tools in espionage operations instead of unique ones. Now this is continuing with this recent example of polymorphic malware. This doesn’t mean that actors are becoming harder to catch, but that security skills and the defenders toolkit needs to evolve along with the toolkit and skills of the malicious actors they are tracking.”

Kaspersky recommends that organizations use anti-targeted attack solutions enhanced with Indicators of Attack (IoA) that focus on the tactics, techniques or actions that malefactors may take when preparing for an attack. IoAs track the techniques deployed, no matter what specific tools are used. The latest versions of Kaspersky Endpoint Detection and Response and Kaspersky Anti Targeted Attack both feature a new database of IoAs, maintained and updated by Kaspersky’s own expert threat hunters.

Read the full text of the report on Securelist.com

Kaspersky Research Finds Cloud Atlas APT Upgraded with Polymorphic Malware

Cloud Atlas, an advanced persistent threat (APT), also known as Inception, has updated its attack arsenal with new tools which allow it to avoid detection through standard Indicators of Compromise.
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