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Log4JShell Used to Swarm VMware Servers with Miners, Backdoors - Threatpost

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Researchers have found three backdoors and four miners in attacks exploiting the Log4Shell vulnerability, some of which are still ongoing.

What researchers are calling a “horde” of miner bots and backdoors are using the Log4Shell bug to take over vulnerable VMware Horizon servers, with threat actors still actively waging some attacks.

On Tuesday, Sophos reported that the remote code execution (RCE) Log4j vulnerability in the ubiquitous Java logging library is under active attack, “particularly among cryptocurrency mining bots.” Besides cryptominers, attackers are also prying open Log4Shell to deliver backdoors that Sophos believes are initial access brokers (IABs) that could lay the groundwork for later ransomware infections.

History of Log4Shell Nightmare-ware

The Log4j flaw was discovered in December, vigorously attacked within hours of its discovery and subsequently dubbed Log4Shell. Sophos’s findings about VMware Horizon servers being besieged by threat actors leveraging the bug is in keeping with what’s been happening since then: In fact, cyberattacks increased 50 percent YoY in 2021, peaking in December, due to a frenzy of Log4j exploits.

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With millions of Log4j-targeted attacks clocking in per hour since the flaw’s discovery, within just a few weeks, there was a record-breaking peak of 925 cyberattacks per week per organization, globally, as Check Point Research (CPR) reported in early January.

Log4Shell has been a nightmare for organizations to hunt down and remediate, given that the flaw affected hundreds of software products, “making it difficult for some organizations to assess their exposure,” noted Sophos researchers Gabor Szappanos and Sean Gallagher in Tuesday’s report. In other words, some outfits don’t necessarily know if they’re vulnerable.

Why Attackers Have Zeroed in on Horizon

In particular, those attacks have included ones targeting vulnerable VMware Horizon servers: a platform that serves up virtual desktops and apps across the hybrid cloud. These servers have been important tools in organizations’ arsenals over the past few years, given that the pandemic triggered the necessity to provide work-from-home tools, the researchers pointed out.

Although VMware released patched versions of Horizon earlier this month – on March 8 – many organizations may not have been able to deploy the patched version or apply workarounds, if they even know that they’re vulnerable to begin with.

“Attempts to compromise Horizon servers are among the more targeted exploits of Log4Shell vulnerabilities because of their nature,” Sophos said.

Even those organizations that have applied the patches or workarounds may have been already compromised in other ways, given the backdoors and reverse-shell activity Sophos has tracked, the researchers cautioned.

In late December and January, VMWare’s Horizon servers with Log4Shell vulnerabilities came under Cobalt Strike attack, as flagged by researchers at Huntress. Other attacks included those that installed web shells.

Those attacks used the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) resource call of Log4j to retrieve a malicious Java class file that modified existing, legitimate Java code, injecting a web shell into the VM Blast Secure Gateway service and thereby granting attackers remote access and code execution. Sophos has seen these attacks show up in customer telemetry since the beginning of January, the researchers said.

The attacks against Horizon servers grew throughout January. Beyond attempts to deploy cryptocurrency-mining malware, other attacks were potentially designed either to grant threat actors initial access or to infect targets with ransomware, Sophos said. Such attacks have continued into this month: the security firm shared a bar chart, shown below, that shows the ebb and flow of the attacks that have bled into mid-March.

VMware Horizon server attacks since the beginning of January. Source: Sophos.

“The largest wave of Log4J attacks aimed at Horizon that we have detected began January 19, and is still ongoing,” the researchers said.

But this wave hasn’t relied on the use of one of cybercrooks’ favorite tools, Cobalt Strike: a commercial penetration-testing tool that can be used to deploy beacons on systems in order to simulate attacks and test network defenses.

Rather, “the cryptominer installer script is directly executed from the Apache Tomcat component of the Horizon server,” Sophos said, with the most frequently used server in the campaigns being 80.71.158.96.

The Payloads

Sophos found a slew of miners being dumped on targeted Horizon servers, including z0Miner, the JavaX miner and at least two variants – the Jin and Mimu cryptocurrency miner bots – of the XMRig commercial cryptominer,. Speaking of which, Uptycs reported in January that cryptojackers had figured out how to inject XMRig into VMware’s vSphere services, undetected. For its part, back in September 2021, Trend Micro found that z0Miner operators were exploiting the Atlassian Confluence RCE (CVE-2021-26084) for cryptojacking attacks.

Sophos also found several backdoors, including several legitimate testing tools. One such was implants of Sliver: a tool used by red teams and penetration testers to emulate adversarial tactics. Sliver showed up as a precursor to the Jin miner in all the cases where Sophos was able to investigate further, leading the researchers to suspect that it’s actually the payload. Either that, or maybe the actor behind Sliver might be a ransomware gang, the researchers hypothesized, given that the same servers deploying Sliver also hosted files to deliver the Atera agent as a payload.

Atera is another common, legitimate remote monitoring and management tool. However, the threat actors aren’t attacking existing Atera installations, per se, the researchers said. Rather, “they install their own Atera agents in order to use the Atera cloud management infrastructure to deploy additional payloads in the future,” they explained.

Sophos also found the legitimate Splashtop Streamer remote-access tool being downloaded and installed on infected systems, “probably as an automated task for the new clients.”

As well, there were several PowerShell-based reverse shells in the payload mix that had been dropped by the Log4Shell exploits.

Two Types of Reverse Shells

Sophos found two types of reverse shell: one, a shorter script that opens a socket connection to a remote server and executes the received buffer, which is supposed to be a PowerShell command.

They also found a larger variant of a reverse shell: one that can reflectively load a Windows binary, with the loader as an encrypted and base64 encoded blob, as depicted below:

Base64 encoded blob. Source: Sophos.

Sophos telemetry showed that while z0Miner, JavaX and some other payloads were downloaded directly by the web shells that had been used for initial compromise, the Jin bots were tied to use of Sliver and used the same wallets as Mimo, “suggesting these three malware were used by the same actor,” Sophos said. Researchers believe that Jin is, in fact, “simply a rebranded version of Mimo.”

Loads of New Malware Loaders

New malware loaders are springing up like dandelions in the spring. Besides the ones covered by Sophos in Tuesday’s report, security researchers at Symantec today also published a technical report on a new malware loader tracked as Verblecon that’s escaped detection due to the polymorphic nature of its code.

Verblecon has likewise been seen in attacks that install cryptocurrency miners on compromised machines.

Saryu Nayyar, CEO and founder of Gurucul, told Threatpost that in order to fight the legitimate assessment tools being used to breach organizations, it’s also “critical” to employ sophisticated technologies – namely, self-training machine learning and behavioral models – to sniff out exploitation of exposed vulnerabilities as well as to detect the remote surveillance done by attackers with tools such as Cobalt Strike, et al.

“Current [extended detection and response, or XDR] and traditional [security information and event management, or SIEM] solutions, even with claims of User Entity Behavior Analytics rooted in known patterns and rule-based artificial intelligence, are unable to adapt to these methods,” she told Threatpost via email. “Organizations need to invest in solutions that employ transparent non rule-based machine learning models to more rapidly identify new attacks.”

Chris Olson, CEO of digital safety platform The Media Trust, told Threatpost on Tuesday that polymorphic techniques “are just another way to hide malicious intentions, along with checks for security tools and live environments.”

This attack provides another example of how the risks of Web 2.0 are being replicated in Web 3.0, he said via email.

“Today’s embryonic beginnings of Web 3.0 are eerily reminiscent of the Web as it existed in the 1990s, showing sporadic signs of vulnerability that may well foreshadow a future era of cyber chaos,” Olson said.

To prevent that from happening, we must learn from our past mistakes, he warned. “Today’s digital ecosystem is riddled with threats because Web 2.0 was not designed for cybersecurity from the outset. Untrusted third parties were allowed to proliferate, leading to phishing attacks, malicious advertising, rampant data privacy abuse and other threats that are hard to fix in the present. With Web 3.0, we have a chance to account for potential attack vectors by design – otherwise, the same issues will replicate themselves with greater potency than ever.”

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