ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane
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@DustinB3403 said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
If there was some 0-day no-click that was to be exploited, the attacker could've sent a blank email to any number of targets at the university and been on the network.
There would be no reason to draft something up like with the multiple spearfishing examples that were prominently displayed.
And their 2 big takeaways from this attack was User training for spearfishing and PII privacy protections.
Not some factor of severely outdated software needing better maintenance.
you missed the whole point where I said perhaps the zero-day was patched, or otherwise prevented from being exploited.. so making the email with multiple attack vectors would be good.
Also, a blank email might trip their spam filter and get killed, etc.
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@scottalanmiller said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
" The actor also gained access (through remote desktop) to a machine in a school which had a publicly routable IP address. Age and permissiveness of the machine and its operating system are the likely reasons the actor compromised this machine"
OMG... they exposed RDP on an outdated OS to the Internet and gave it a routable IP address!
nothing unsurprising here, really.
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@scottalanmiller said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
"20−21 November 2018: the creation of attack station one.
Over the course of two days the actor downloaded tools and scripts to build attack station one. To
download these tools the actor also compromised a second Internet facing webserver using a webshell
and used this server to download software tools to attack station one. These tools were used to run
scripts and perform remote management tasks including scheduled deletion of logs to hide their
activities. The actor started to map the ANU network on 21 November. "They built an attack station remotely? This sounds fine until you hear the second part...
I don't understand the need to compromise a second machine, was the first compromised machine unable to get the desired tools because of a web filter?
"22 November 2018: the creation of virtual machines on attack station one.
The following day the actor set up two virtual machines on attack station one, one using Windows XP
and the second Kali Linux. Both operating systems were download using BitTorrent. "
So this was nested virtualization? Or somehow they managed to gain access to a physical box that they totally took over? They never mention the hypervisor at play here, but this is some crazy stuff that they are glossing over.
Why do you assume nested virtualization? Isn't station one a user's laptop/desktop? Assuming Windows 10, the attacker could have enabled Hyper-V then ran two VMs there. Or they could have installed virtualbox and built VMs there... I see no reason to consider nested virtualization.
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@Dashrender one interesting tidbit from the Brian Krebs talk at SpiceWorld 2019 was him talking about how hackers typically take a couple weeks to surveil the landscape before executing their payload. Them getting in and then taking time to reinforce their toehold into the environment sounds like it's the norm now.
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@DustinB3403 said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
Does that really count as no-click? I'd think this is more a scripted execution of their email client being allowed to execute scripts.
Has to be scripted execution for some environment. Email itself is plain text and cannot be a threat until a scripted execution decides to treat it as an executable.
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@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
Why do you assume nested virtualization? Isn't station one a user's laptop/desktop? Assuming Windows 10, the attacker could have enabled Hyper-V then ran two VMs there. Or they could have installed virtualbox and built VMs there... I see no reason to consider nested virtualization.
Because they got a platform first. Then they created VMs on it. Where was this machine hiding if it was a physical machine? Anything like Hyper-V, VirtualBox, etc. would be incredibly noticeable. Especially given that we know how old the equipment that they were running there is. How you could hide building an attack platform on someone's desktop is beyond me. How the hell would no one notice?
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@Nic said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@Dashrender one interesting tidbit from the Brian Krebs talk at SpiceWorld 2019 was him talking about how hackers typically take a couple weeks to surveil the landscape before executing their payload. Them getting in and then taking time to reinforce their toehold into the environment sounds like it's the norm now.
They've had time to figure out that even big shops like a huge university have nothing looking for breaches, and nothing being secured. So why try to be fast?
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@scottalanmiller said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
Why do you assume nested virtualization? Isn't station one a user's laptop/desktop? Assuming Windows 10, the attacker could have enabled Hyper-V then ran two VMs there. Or they could have installed virtualbox and built VMs there... I see no reason to consider nested virtualization.
Because they got a platform first. Then they created VMs on it. Where was this machine hiding if it was a physical machine? Anything like Hyper-V, VirtualBox, etc. would be incredibly noticeable. Especially given that we know how old the equipment that they were running there is. How you could hide building an attack platform on someone's desktop is beyond me. How the hell would no one notice?
I still haven't read the 20 page doc... but I'm completely assuming the the attack station is a person's desktop, something that was commandeered via the phishing attack. It seemed likely that that machine is where they installed a hyper-visor.
I could easily see this being an executive machine that's more power than he ever needs, so having those VMs running there could be barely noticeable, and if the attacker was using the machine mainly while the user wasn't, then it would be even less noticeable to the end user. -
@Dashrender we know that station one was out of date, presumably running a much older OS as these systems were fully decommissioned once this was all discovered.
I would be highly suspect if hyperv was able to be setup on these systems, more likely some version of virtual box was installed, and used to run the operation from.
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@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
I still haven't read the 20 page doc... but I'm completely assuming the the attack station is a person's desktop, something that was commandeered via the phishing attack. It seemed likely that that machine is where they installed a hyper-visor.
That's reasonable, but how the heck did they commandeer a desktop, install a hypervisor, run multiple VMs, and no one notice!!
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@scottalanmiller said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
I still haven't read the 20 page doc... but I'm completely assuming the the attack station is a person's desktop, something that was commandeered via the phishing attack. It seemed likely that that machine is where they installed a hyper-visor.
That's reasonable, but how the heck did they commandeer a desktop, install a hypervisor, run multiple VMs, and no one notice!!
That I would guess is the million dollar question. Like did they have workstations setup randomly throughout the school, like tucked in a closet and people just forgot to remove them?
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@scottalanmiller said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
I still haven't read the 20 page doc... but I'm completely assuming the the attack station is a person's desktop, something that was commandeered via the phishing attack. It seemed likely that that machine is where they installed a hyper-visor.
That's reasonable, but how the heck did they commandeer a desktop, install a hypervisor, run multiple VMs, and no one notice!!
I really don't understand your lack of understanding? Do you expect that something would show up to the user, something other than the performance hit? As I said, if the hacker only used the computer when the normal user was off, then it's very easy to see that that normal user would not see the performance drop.
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@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@scottalanmiller said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
I still haven't read the 20 page doc... but I'm completely assuming the the attack station is a person's desktop, something that was commandeered via the phishing attack. It seemed likely that that machine is where they installed a hyper-visor.
That's reasonable, but how the heck did they commandeer a desktop, install a hypervisor, run multiple VMs, and no one notice!!
I really don't understand your lack of understanding? Do you expect that something would show up to the user, something other than the performance hit? As I said, if the hacker only used the computer when the normal user was off, then it's very easy to see that that normal user would not see the performance drop.
I suppose. But do you have a machine in your environment that could handle even the storage requirements of multiple VMs without causing issues? We are talking about a school running old machines here. Taking old equipment and "hiding" a ton of resources is harder than it sounds.
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@scottalanmiller said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@scottalanmiller said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
I still haven't read the 20 page doc... but I'm completely assuming the the attack station is a person's desktop, something that was commandeered via the phishing attack. It seemed likely that that machine is where they installed a hyper-visor.
That's reasonable, but how the heck did they commandeer a desktop, install a hypervisor, run multiple VMs, and no one notice!!
I really don't understand your lack of understanding? Do you expect that something would show up to the user, something other than the performance hit? As I said, if the hacker only used the computer when the normal user was off, then it's very easy to see that that normal user would not see the performance drop.
I suppose. But do you have a machine in your environment that could handle even the storage requirements of multiple VMs without causing issues? We are talking about a school running old machines here. Taking old equipment and "hiding" a ton of resources is harder than it sounds.
They said XP and something else - XP, depending on the tools used by the attacker is 20 GB base, call it another 20 GB for tools - yes, every machine in my environment could give up 40 GB of storage.
And if the machines are really that old - then I would fully expect them to have 500 GB HDD, making this even less of an issue than my machines that only have 128 GB SSDs.Most corporate machines barely require any local storage at all. My normal install uses around 30 GB today with windows 10. The desktop is really the only place anyone stores anything, the rest is in folder redirected documents folder, which really lives on the network (may or may not have local copy).
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@Dashrender Except that we know that this environment isn't run like a corporation, since they have machines that were completely unaccounted for; for some duration of time that people forgot about them and those machines were targeted and used.
The summation of this is that; this university is absolutely a joke, run by people who don't take their responsibilities seriously and were hoping to never have any issue occur ever.
Edit: Typo corrected in bold.
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@DustinB3403 said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
since they have machines that were completely unaccounted for; for some duration of time that people forgot about them and those machines were targeted and used.
Was that specifically stated in the 20 page paper? machine completely unaccounted for? And if they were - they wouldn't be machines that get phished on - that would have to be a user's machine being phished. Which remember, is where this whole thing started.
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@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@DustinB3403 said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
since they have machines that were completely unaccounted for; for some duration of time that people forgot about them and those machines were targeted and used.
Was that specifically stated in the 20 page paper? machine completely unaccounted for? And if they were - they wouldn't be machines that get phished on - that would have to be a user's machine being phished. Which remember, is where this whole thing started.
What? Are you being dense on purpose?
You phish for credentials, not for a computer. Credentials can be used on any number of systems that are setup in a domain. Which specifically "the attacker was phishing for administrative credentials". Read the damn paper, because you're stating to sound absolutely flipping insane.
Any number of workstations in a DOMAIN can have administrative credentials used on them, which is what you phish for. FFS!
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@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@DustinB3403 said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
since they have machines that were completely unaccounted for; for some duration of time that people forgot about them and those machines were targeted and used.
Was that specifically stated in the 20 page paper? machine completely unaccounted for? And if they were - they wouldn't be machines that get phished on - that would have to be a user's machine being phished. Which remember, is where this whole thing started.
They made a big point of showing that the machines being phished weren't used for any access.
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@DustinB3403 said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@Dashrender said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
@DustinB3403 said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
since they have machines that were completely unaccounted for; for some duration of time that people forgot about them and those machines were targeted and used.
Was that specifically stated in the 20 page paper? machine completely unaccounted for? And if they were - they wouldn't be machines that get phished on - that would have to be a user's machine being phished. Which remember, is where this whole thing started.
What? Are you being dense on purpose?
You phish for credentials, not for a computer. Credentials can be used on any number of systems that are setup in a domain. Which specifically "the attacker was phishing for administrative credentials". Read the damn paper, because you're stating to sound absolutely flipping insane.
Any number of workstations in a DOMAIN can have administrative credentials used on them, which is what you phish for. FFS!
Once again... AD being a risk
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@scottalanmiller said in ANU hacked by phishing email through the preview pane:
Once again... AD being a risk
Yeah it absolutely was in this case, but so would Samba. So half one half another. If the school was LAN-less I can't imagine how'd they'd operate. Since they clearly had no idea what was on their LAN in the first place.