National Cyber Warfare Foundation (NCWF) Forums


Beware Of Weaponized Zip Files That Deliver WINELOADER Malware


0 user ratings
2024-04-22 14:12:22
milo
Red Team (CNA)

APT29, a Russian threat group, targeted German political parties with a new backdoor called WINELOADER using spear-phishing emails containing malicious links to ZIP files hosted on compromised websites. The ZIP files deployed an HTA that initiated a multi-stage infection chain, delivering WINELOADER.  The backdoor has functionalities for communication with command and control servers and utilizes […]


The post Beware Of Weaponized Zip Files That Deliver WINELOADER Malware appeared first on GBHackers on Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.



APT29, a Russian threat group, targeted German political parties with a new backdoor called WINELOADER using spear-phishing emails containing malicious links to ZIP files hosted on compromised websites.





The ZIP files deployed an HTA that initiated a multi-stage infection chain, delivering WINELOADER. 





The backdoor has functionalities for communication with command and control servers and utilizes evasion techniques.





To defend against the APT29 campaign, security teams should understand these TTPs and the WINELOADER backdoor to improve detection capabilities. 





APT29 uses spear-phishing emails with a malicious PDF attachment disguised as a wine-tasting invitation. The PDF tricks the victim into downloading a ZIP file containing an HTA (wine.hta or invite.hta). 





Attack Chain



The HTA uses obfuscated JavaScript (potentially obfuscated with obfuscator.io) to download and execute a legitimate but vulnerable Microsoft binary (sqlwriter.exe or sqldumper.exe) along with a malicious DLL (vcruntime140.dll), which is side-loaded by the legitimate binary establishes the initial foothold for the WINELOADER infection. 





Free Webinar | Mastering WAAP/WAF ROI Analysis | Book Your Spot





The Splunk Threat Research Team created an Atomic Red Team test to simulate the initial access of the WINELOADER campaign, excluding the data exfiltration tools, which involve an HTA triggering a base64 decoded payload (invite.zip) containing a DLL (gup.exe). 





It mimics the side-loading behavior but uses a non-malicious DLL and to further emulate real-world attacks, the test injects sqlwriter.exe within a benign vcruntime140.dll. 





Security teams can evaluate their capacity to identify these APT29 TTPs by running and analyzing this test, which will enable them to improve their analytics, response processes, and overall security posture.  





malicious .HTA



The HTA file exploits a DLL side-loading vulnerability. It first writes the Base64-encoded content of a malicious ZIP file (invite.zip) to a text file (invite.txt) on the system, then decodes the text file back to a ZIP and extracts its contents. 





It triggers a user prompt, “Are You Ready?” before executing the payload, likely a malicious DLL named gup.exe and if the user clicks “OK,” the DLL is loaded and likely spawns calc.exe as a test.





A final message box confirms successful DLL side-loading with the Atomic logo. 





Simulation Attack



WINELOADER exploits legitimate applications like SQLWriter.exe or Sqldumper.exe through DLL side-loading by loading a malicious vcruntime140.dll that triggers code execution. 





The code decrypts a hidden data block using the RC4 algorithm with a key stored within the malicious DLL itself, allowing WINELOADER to gain initial functionality on a compromised system. 





One of the RC4 Key



Researchers analyzed a malicious DLL file (vcruntime140.dll) containing a variant of WINELOADER malware, which is encrypted with the RC4 algorithm and hides critical components like API names and strings to avoid detection





C2, User Agent & Landing Page



After decryption, the malware connects to its command and control server (C2) and downloads additional malicious components.





The report provides the C2 server addresses and user-agent strings used by the malware. 





Looking to Safeguard Your Company from Advanced Cyber Threats? Deploy TrustNet to Your Radar ASAP.  


The post Beware Of Weaponized Zip Files That Deliver WINELOADER Malware appeared first on GBHackers on Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.



Source: gbHackers
Source Link: https://gbhackers.com/weaponized-zip-files-wineloader-malware/


Comments
new comment
Nobody has commented yet. Will you be the first?
 
Forum
Red Team (CNA)



© Copyright 2012 through 2024 - National Cyber War Foundation - All rights reserved worldwide.