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HP Finds Threat Actors Get Creative With Building-Block Style Attacks

HP Finds Threat Actors Get Creative With Building-Block Style Attacks

HP Inc. has issued its quarterly HP Wolf Security Threat Insights Report, showing how threat actors are chaining different combinations of attacks together like toy bricks to sneak past detection tools.

By isolating threats that have evaded detection tools on PCs, HP Wolf Security has specifici insight into the latest techniques used by cybercriminals in the fast-changing cybercrime landscape. To date, HP Wolf Security customers have clicked on over 30 billion email attachments, web pages and downloaded files with no reported breaches.

Based on data from millions of endpoints running HP Wolf Securityii, the researchers found:

  • It's playtime for cybercriminals using building-block style attacks: Attack chains are often formulaic, with well-trodden paths to the payload. Yet creative QakBot campaigns saw threat actors connecting different blocks together to create unique infection chains. By switching up different file types and techniques, they were able to bypass detection tools and security policies. Thirty-two percent of the QakBot infection chains analyzed by HP in Q2 were unique.
  • Spot the difference – blogger or keylogger: Attackers behind recent Aggah campaigns hosted malicious code within popular blogging platform, Blogspot. By hiding the code in a legitimate source, it makes it harder for defenders to tell if a user is reading a blog or launching an attack. Threat actors then use their knowledge of Windows systems to disable some anti-malware capabilities on the user's machine, execute XWorm or the AgentTesla Remote Access Trojan (RAT), and steal sensitive information.
  • Going against protocol: HP also identified other Aggah attacks using a DNS TXT record query — typically used to access simple information on domain names — to deliver the AgentTesla RAT. Threat actors know the DNS protocol is not often monitored or protected by security teams, making this attack extremely hard to detect.
  • Multilingual malware: A recent campaign uses multiple programming language to avoid detection. Firstly, it encrypts its payload using a crypter written in Go, disabling the antimalware scanning features that would usually detect it. The attack then switches language to C++ to interact with the victim's operating system and run the .NET malware in memory — leaving minimal traces on the PC.

"Today's attackers are becoming better organized and more knowledgeable," said Patrick Schläpfer, senior malware analyst, HP Wolf Security threat research team. "They research and analyze operating system internals, making it much easier for them to exploit the gaps. By knowing which doors to push, they can navigate internal systems with ease, using relatively simple techniques in very effective ways — without sounding the alarm."

The report details how cybercriminal groups are diversifying attack methods to bypass security policies and detection tools. Key findings include:

  • Archives were the most popular malware delivery type for the fifth quarter running, used in 44% of cases analyzed by HP.
  • Q2 saw a 23% rise in HTML threats stopped by HP Wolf Security compared to Q1.
  • There was a 4%-point increase in executables from 14% to 18% from Q1 to Q2, mainly caused by usage of the PDFpower.exe file, which bundled software with a browser hijacking malware.
  • HP noted a 6%-point drop in spreadsheet malware (19% to 13%) in Q1 compared to Q4, as attackers move away from Office formats that are more difficult to run macros in.
  • At least 12% of email threats identified by HP Sure Click bypassed one or more email gateway scanner in Q2.
  • The top threat vectors in Q2 were email (79%) and browser downloads (12%).

"While infection chains may vary, the methods of initiation remain the same — it inevitably comes down to the user clicking on something," said Dr. Ian Pratt, global head of security for personal systems, HP Inc. "Instead of trying to second guess the infection chain, organizations should isolate and contain risky activities such as opening email attachments, clicking on links and browser downloads."

HP Wolf Security runs risky tasks in isolated, hardware-enforced virtual machines running on the endpoint to protect users, without impacting their productivity. It also captures detailed traces of attempted infections. HP's application isolation technology mitigates threats that slip past other security tools and provides unique insights into novel intrusion techniques and threat actor behavior.

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